The palpal bulb of a mature male spider is borne on the last segment of the pedipalp. This segment usually has touch-sensitive hairs (setae) with nerves leading to them. The bulb itself is entirely without nerves, and hence without sensory organs and muscles, since these depend on nerves for their functioning, although some spiders have one or two muscles external to the bulb and connected to it by tendons. The bulb contains a tube or duct, usually coiled, open near the tip of the bulb and closed at the other end, in which sperm is stored before being used to inseminate a female. The closed end may be expanded, forming a "fundus". The tube usually opens via a narrow tip, the "embolus". The palpal bulbs are only fully developed in adult male spiders. They develop within the end segment of the palp (the
tarsus), and are only completely visible after the final moult. In some species, apart from carrying the palpal bulb, the tarsus is relatively unchanged. In most species, the tarsus changes shape and forms a hollow structure which surrounds and protects the bulb. It is then called a "cymbium". The structure of the palpal bulb varies widely. Most species have a bulb made up of three groups of hardened parts (
sclerites), separated from the rest of the palp and one another by elastic sacs called "haematodochae" (also spelt "hematodochae"). Normally, the haematodochae are collapsed and more-or-less hidden between the groups of sclerites, but they can be expanded by
haemolymph being pumped in, thus causing the sclerites to move and separate. In some groups of spiders (e.g.
Segestrioides species) the bulb is reduced to a single pear-shaped structure. By contrast, members of the
Entelegynae have evolved extremely elaborate palpal bulbs, with multiple complexly shaped sclerites.
: 1 – from the right (prolateral side nearest the mouth); 2 – from the ventral side, i.e. underside; 3 – from the left (retrolateral side, furthest from the mouth)bH
– basal haematodocha; Cb
– cymbium; E
– embolus; HSt
– hook of subtegulum; mA
– median apophysis; mH
– median haematodocha; PSt
– process of subtegulum; St
– subtegulum; Te'' – tegulumSee text for further explanation. Spider specialists (arachnologists) have developed a detailed terminology to describe the kind of palpal bulb found in most spiders. Starting from the end nearest the head: • the
cymbium is the modified tarsus of the palp (
Cb in the images) • the
basal haematodocha or
proximal haematodocha separates the cymbium from the following group of sclerites (
bH in image 3) • the
subtegulum is the main sclerite in the first group (
St in image 1) • the
median haematodocha separates the subtegulum from the next group of sclerites (
mH in images 1 and 2) • the
tegulum is the main sclerite in the second group (
Te in the images), along with the
median apophysis (
mA in images 1 and 2) and the
conductor (where present) • the
distal haematodocha separates the tegulum from the final group of sclerites (not shown in the images); in
Lycosidae and certain other taxa, a
palea, a part of the distal tegulum that is not fully sclerotized, is formed out of the wall of the distal haematodocha • the
embolus is the main part of the third and final group of sclerites (
E in the images) Other sclerites and "protrusions" (apophyses) may also be present. The diversity of entelegyne palpal bulbs makes it difficult to be sure that structures given the same name actually have the same origin (i.e. are
homologous). This applies in particular to the "median apophysis". In
mesothele spiders, whose palpal bulbs have the same basic structure as those of entelegyne spiders, the name
contrategulum has been used in preference to "median apophysis" for the sclerite immediately following (distal to) the tegulum. The palpal bulb is expanded and moved during courtship and copulation. In mesothele spiders, such as
Liphistius and
Heptathela, there are two muscles, originating lower in the pedipalp, that attach by tendons to parts of the bulb and help to move it, the soft haematodochae allowing both movement and expansion. The same two muscles are also present in
mygalomorphs. In araneomorph spiders there is a trend towards loss of muscles and greater development of the basal haematodocha. Most non-entelegyne araneomorphs have both muscles; most entelegynes have neither, although there are some, such as
Argyroneta aquatica and
Deinopis species, which retain one muscle. ==Function==