![](../I/Gongylonema_pulchrum_nematode_from_man_Figure_2f.jpg.webp)
Posterior end of a male nematode, Gongylonema pulchrum, showing right spicule and gubernaculum
![](../I/lossy-page1-220px-Parasite140007-fig3_Philometra_piscaria_Moravec_%2526_Justine%252C_2014_(Nematoda%252C_Philometridae).tif.jpg.webp)
Drawings of a male philometrid nematode - E and F represent the gubernaculum
In nematodes, the gubernaculum is a hardened or sclerotized structure in the wall that guides the protrusion of the spicule during copulation.[1] For example, in Caenorhabditis elegans, spicules serve to open and dilate the vagina of the hermaphrodite and the gubernaculum is a grooved plate in which the spicules move; the gubernaculum is controlled by two erector and two protractor muscles.[1]
The shape and size of the gubernaculum are often important characters for the systematics of nematodes.[2]
References
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