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Last updated January 1, 2014

Green Iguana Mouth

©1999 Melissa Kaplan

 

This drawing of the iguana mouth is an image map. Click on the main structures inside the mouth to find out what they are. You may need to look at your browser's lower operator bar to see when you are on a mapped area.

Drawing of inside of green iguana mouth.  This drawing is an image map: click on the main structures to find out what they are.

Drawing excerpted from Laboratory Anatomy of the Iguana. 1975. Jonathan C. Oldham and Hobart M. Smith. Illustrated by R.S. Hicks, S.A. Miller, and R.D. Weaver. Wm. C. Brown Company Publishers, Dubuque IA. p. 57

The palate forms the front part of of the roof of the mouth. Fenestris exochoanalis: Part of the chemosensory structure leading to the vomeronasal organ. Fenestris exochoanalis: Part of the chemosensory structure leading to the vomeronasal organ. The choana, located in the palate, connects the nasal cavities with the larynx. Glottis, epiglottis and larynx: The glottis opens and closes as the lizard or snake breathes. If it is open when you are forcefeeding or force-hydrating, the fluids or food may run down or be forced into the open glottis if the reptile is not given time to close it between breaths. The tongue's forked tip (not seen in this drawing) contains chemosensory receptors which, when the tongue tip is brushed against the fenestra exochoanalis, passes them onto the vomeronasal organ. The trachea is the conduit through which air passes between the lungs, mouth and nasal cavities.

Parts of the Mouth

Palate
The palate forms the front part of of the roof of the mouth.

Fenestra exochoanalis
Part of the chemosensory structure leading to the vomeronasal organ (also called the Jacobson's organ).

Choana
The choana, located in the palate, connects the nasal cavities with the larynx.

Glottis, Epiglottis and Larynx
The glottis opens and closes as the lizard or snake breathes. If it is open when you are forcefeeding or force-hydrating, the fluids or food may run down or be forced into the open glottis if the reptile is not given time to close it between breaths.

Trachea
The trachea is the conduit through which air passes between the lungs, mouth and nasal cavities.

Tongue
The tongue's forked tip (not seen in this drawing) contains chemosensory receptors which, when the tongue tip is brushed against the fenestra exochoanalis, passes them onto the vomeronasal organ. The tips of the iguana's tongue are a deeper, darker red than the rest of the tongue, though this coloring may not become apparent until the iguana is two or more years old and the tongue considerably larger than it is in hatchlings.


Related Articles

Iguana Teeth

The Sixth Sense: The Vomeronasal Organ

www.anapsid.org/iguana/mouth.html

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