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Penises as Variable-Volume Hydrostatic Skeletons
DIANE A. KELLY a
  a Department of Biology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA
 Address for correspondence: Diane A. Kelly, Department of Biology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA 01003. Voice: 413-531-7226; fax: 413-545-3243.
  dkelly@bio.umass.edu
Copyright 2007 New York Academy of Sciences
KEYWORDS
penis • hydroskeleton • hydrostat • mammal

ABSTRACT

Abstract:  Penises are inflatable intromittent organs that transfer sperm to a female during copulation. Most of the time, males store their penises in a flexible detumesced state, but they can rapidly inflate them with blood when an opportunity for reproductive behavior arises. In mammals, the primary erectile tissue is called the corpus cavernosum; its anatomy is a close match to a model hydroskeleton reinforced by an axial orthogonal fiber array. The wall of the corpus cavernosum contains layers of highly organized collagen fibers arranged at 0° and 90° to the penile long axis. Flaccid wall tissue is folded. Collagen fiber straightening during erection expands the tunica albuginea and increases both its stiffness and its second moment of area. These changes make the entire penis larger and harder to bend. Axial orthogonal fiber reinforcement affects the mechanical behavior of the erect corpus cavernosum, making it resistant to tensile, compressive, and bending forces.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1196/annals.1389.014 About DOI

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