The mammalian tongue has evolved for specialized functions in
different species. The structure of its papillae tells about the
animal's diet, habit, and taxonomy. The opossum has four kinds of
lingual papillae (filiform, conical, fungiform, vallate). Scanning
electron microscopy of the external features, connective tissue cores, and
corrosion casts of the microvasculature show the filiform papillae have a
spearhead-like main process and spiny accessory processes around the
apical part of the main process. The shape and number of both processes
depend on their position on the tongue. On the apex, the main processes
have shovel-like capillary networks and the accessory processes have small
conical networks. On the lingual radix, the processes have small capillary
loops. In the patch region, conical papillae have capillaries arranged as
a full sail curving posteriorly. The fungiform papillae are scattered
among the filiform papillae and have capillary baskets beneath each taste
bud. Giant fungiform papillae on the tongue tip are three to four times
larger than the ones on the lingual body. Capillaries of giant papillae
form a fan-shaped network. The opossum has three vallate papillae arranged
in a triangle. Their tops have secondary capillary loops but not their
lateral surfaces. Mucosal folds on the posterolateral border have
irregular, fingerlike projections with cylindrical capillary networks.
These findings and the structure of the rest of the masticatory apparatus
suggest the lingual papillae of opossum have kept their ancestral
carnivorous features but also developed the herbivore characteristics of
other marsupials.