pleurembolic

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English

Etymology

From Ancient Greek πλευρά (pleurá, a rib, a side of something) + Ancient Greek ἔμβολος (émbolos, peg, stopper).

Adjective

pleurembolic (not comparable)

  1. (biology) Capable of being withdrawn by a backward movement of the parts from which it protrudes so that it becomes engulfed.
    • 1970, Studies on the Fauna of Curaçao and Other Caribbean Islands:
      Some scattered melanophores in fundus of atrium, a few pigment cells along seminal groove. Male atrium (a) narrow in front, wide behind. Its fundus forms a deep fold which receives seminal groove and functions as pleurembolic penis (p).
    • 2003, Harold Barnes, Oceanography and Marine Biology, →ISBN, page 373:
      The proboscis wall itself is highly muscular and has longitudinal, circular and diagonal muscle layers. It is of the pleurembolic type characteristic of the Buccinacea.
    • 2008, Winston Ponder, David R. Lindberg, Phylogeny and Evolution of the Mollusca, →ISBN, page 346:
      The acrembolic type has appeared independently several times in gastropods, including some heterobranchs, while the pleurembolic proboscis may have appeared only once.