The oesophageal pouches (also known as sugar glands) [1] are a pair of pouches connected to the oesophagus of all molluscs, and represent a synapomorphy of the phylum. [2]
Usually forming a pair of lateral structures, oesophageal pouches take various forms, but usually account for a fair portion of the anterior volume of the creeping molluscs and scaphopods. [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] There is a single pouch ventral to the rear of the radula in some nudibranch sea slugs. [6] The pouches are lined with ciliated secretory cells. [8]
The pouches contain digestive enzymes that break down starch and other polysaccharides, [1] and also extrude mucus. [6]
The features are considered ancestral to molluscs [2] and are present in monoplacophorans, [9] but have been secondarily lost in the Heterobranchia. [10] However, it is not certain that all oesophageal diverticulae are homologous. [11] [12]