Summary
Prominent secretory nerve endings are found at the posterior margin of the supraesophageal ganglion in the protandric polychaete, Ophryotrocha puerilis. Solitary juveniles developing as primary males, and then as females, accumulate neurosecretory material in the nerve endings which thereby swell and become filled with granules. Females maintained in mass culture have similar terminals, whereas in secondary males (males which had been females before), these axon terminals are very small and contain no material. When such males are isolated, they accumulate neurosecretory material within the nerve endings and become females. When formerly isolated females are put together, their stores of neurosecretory material are rapidly discharged. Subsequently they lay egg masses and switch to the male state. These effects are mediated by a pheromone released during social contact of formerly isolated females. The complexity of the relationship between neurosecretory activity and sexual state is indicated by the situation in animals maintained in pairs, when both male and female partners have swollen nerve endings packed with secretory material.