Background: All examined mammals have at least two sets of lingual salivary glands: von Ebner's glands and Weber's glands. A third set, the glands of Blandin and Nuhn, is present in the tongues of some but not all mammals. Vampire bats, Desmodus rotundus, are unusual in that they possess another set of lingual glands, these being in the midtongue region.
Methods: The anterior half of the tongue was extirpated from several adult vampire bats, dissected, and tissue blocks derived from the midregions of the body of the tongue prepared for transmission electron microscopy by conventional means.
Results: The midlingual glands are in the form of long, tubular secretory endpieces that are succeeded by ducts of simple morphology. In general, the secretory portions consist of two cell types, which may be intermingled in the same tubule or may form tubules that consist wholly of one cell type or the other. Seromucous cells usually have one or several rough endoplasmic reticulum cisternae that are hugely distended by a homogeneously dense material. Their granules have a bizonal substructure: one or several dense bands are embedded in a lighter matrix. Mucous cells are rather typical in structure, but their secretory product is different from run-of-the-mill mucous droplets. These droplets vary in density from cell to cell. In some cells, these droplets have a relatively light matrix; in other cells, the droplet is unusually dense, consisting mainly of a dark, structureless matrix with marginal lenticular lacunae of low density in which some short, irregular filaments are scattered. A rare finding is the presence of ciliated cells intermingled with secretory endpiece cells. The cilia are of conventional morphology. Secretory tubules are succeeded by ducts that resemble intercalated ducts; the epithelium of these ducts gradually increases in height to form a kind of excretory duct, without the intervention of striated ducts. As the ducts approach the lingual surface, the epithelium changes to stratified squamous.
Conclusions: Saliva produced by the midlingual glands may be an aid in the reciprocal grooming behavior of vampire bats. Based on their morphology, the excurrent ducts may not modify the initial saliva elaborated by these glands and might act simply as pipelines by which the saliva reaches the mouth.