Darwinist ignorance: vestigial organs? rete ovarii (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Wednesday, February 28, 2024, 17:35 (268 days ago) @ David Turell

Another review article:

https://www.sciencealert.com/ovary-appendage-dismissed-as-functionless-may-act-like-the...

"While diligently recorded in early versions of the famous surgical reference book, Gray's Anatomy, the rete ovarii's existence has largely fallen into obscurity, left out of modern texts and dismissed as a "functionless vestige".

"This is despite the fact the structure is highly conserved across mammal species, from camels to guinea pigs, suggesting the small ovarian structure has an important enough role.

"What's more, an equivalent (if simpler) structure in males – the rete testis – has a known function involved in maintaining the fluid in the testicles and helps with sperm transport.

***

"A dense tangle of blood vessels surrounds the structure, which is also directly connected to a system of neurons that join to muscle cells for contraction like they do in the uterus or to the outer cell layer like they do in our gut.

"Together these anatomical features suggest the tiny structure may contribute to hormone signaling, which could control how many follicles on an ovary produce eggs each cycle. The rete ovarii may be a sensory appendage and act like the ovary's 'tongue'.

"In flies and worms, ovaries respond to changing conditions in their immediate environment, including those induced by changes in diet. Anbarci and team suspect this may be the rete ovarii's role, to sense changes in the immediate environments of mammalian ovaries' and send signals for their reproductive organs to respond accordingly.

***

"'The direct proximity of the rete ovarii to the ovary and its integration with the extraovarian landscape suggest that it plays an important role in ovary development and homeostasis," the researchers write in their paper.

"There's still much to confirm but the researchers next intend to challenge this structure's response to physiological signals including hormones and diet changes.

"'We suggest that the RO be added to this list and investigated as an additional component of female reproductive function," the researchers conclude."

Comment: everything in an organism is there for a purpose. Nothing is vestigial. It is a human error in theory.


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