Tunica (biology)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

In biology, a tunica (/ˈt(j)nɪkə/,[1] UK: /ˈnɪkə/; pl.: tunicae) is a layer, coat, sheath, or similar covering. The word came to English from the Neo-Latin of science and medicine. Its literal sense is about the same as that of the word tunic, with which it is cognate. In biology, one of its senses used to be the taxonomic name of a genus of plants, but the nomenclature has been revised and those plants are now included in the genus Petrorhagia.

In modern biology in general, tunica occurs as a technical or anatomical term mainly in

organ or organism that has a tunic(a) may be said to be tunicate, as in a tunicate bulb. This adjective tunicate is not to be confused with the noun tunicate, which refers to a member of the subphylum Tunicata
.

Botanical and related usages

In botany, there are several contexts for the term.

Zoological usages

As an anatomical or morphological reference in zoology, tunica has a range of applications to membranous structures in anatomy, including human anatomy. Such structures are generally coverings or capsules of organs, but also may be linings of cavities. In some cases, such as the walls of macroscopic blood vessels, layers of the tissue of the walls, whether inner, intermediate, or outer, are called tunica of one kind or another. Examples follow, but neither the list nor the discussions are exhaustive.

  • In arteries and veins, the inner wall is the
    tunica adventitia, and they are separated by the tunica media. More generally, the tunica adventitia or simply the "adventitia" is the outermost connective tissue covering round any internal organ.[6]
  • Tunica albuginea is a general term for a tunic of whitish connective tissue. In human anatomy, it generally is applied in three contexts: the fibrous sheath of the corpora cavernosa penis, the fibrous tunic of the testis, and the connective tissue tunic around the ovaries.[6]
  • Tunica dartos is a muscular tunic beneath the skin of the scrotum. It is one of the mechanisms for retraction of the testes, largely for temperature control.[7]
  • Tunica fibrosa oculi is the fibrous tunic of the eyeball, the outer layer that includes both the cornea and sclera.[6]
  • Tunica mucosa is the predominant Latin rendering of "mucous membrane" in English-speaking countries, though membrana mucosa also is acceptable and in some European languages is preferred. The name may be qualified in referring to particular regions of the body, such as tunica mucosa oris for the oral mucosa, and tunica mucosa uteri for the endometrium.[7]
  • Tunica muscularis refers to muscular layers in the walls of hollow organs such as the gut, where they are required for peristalsis, and sometimes for sphincters.[7]
  • Tunica vaginalis is the serous covering of the testis within the scrotum.[6]
  • Tunica vasculosa could refer to any tunic rich in blood vessels. In human anatomy, it generally refers either to tunica vasculosa lentis[8] or to tunica vasculosa testis[9]

References

  1. ^ "tunica". Dictionary.com Unabridged (Online). n.d.
  2. ^ Lindley, John. The Treasury of Botany. Pub. William Wood 1872. May be downloaded from: [1]
  3. ^ a b c d Jackson, Benjamin, Daydon; A Glossary of Botanic Terms with their Derivation and Accent; Published by Gerald Duckworth & Co. London, 4th ed 1928
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