Cement glands are small organs found in Acanthocephala that are used to temporarily close the posterior end of the female after copulation.[1]
Cement glands are also mucus-secreting organs that can attach embryos or larvae to a solid substrate. These can be found in frogs such as those in the genus Xenopus,[2] fish such as the Mexican tetra,[3] and crustaceans.
^Bush, Albert O.; Fernández, Jacqueline C.; Esch, Gerald W.; Seed, J. Richard (2001). Parasitism : the diversity and ecology of animal parasites. Cambridge, UK New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. p. 203. ISBN0-521-66278-8. OCLC44131774.