The corpuscles of Stannius of arawana (Osteoglossum bicirrhosum), an ancient teleost, were examined by routine light and electron microscopy and following their immunoreactivity to salmon and trout stanniocalcin antisera. Periodic acid-Schiff positive cells of the corpuscles of Stannius had a follicular arrangement and demonstrated a strong immunohistochemical reaction with both stanniocalcin antisera. Fine structural analysis of the paired, posteriorly located, and perirenal ovoid glands revealed two morphologically distinct cell types the basal laminae of which were ramified by nerve terminals. Immunocytochemistry demonstrated that osmiophilic secretory granules in both cell types were immunoreactive to the stanniocalcin antisera. When extracts of arawana corpuscles of Stannius were subjected to sodium dodecyl sulphate electrophoresis and Western blot analysis a diffuse molecular weight band was evident ( approximately 68 kDa) in the non-reduced condition. In all cases, immunoreactivity was abolished by preabsorption of the antisera with salmon stanniocalcin or with a crude extract of arawana corpuscles of Stannius. The corpuscles of Stannius of arawana are similar to those in more recent teleosts with respect to cell structure and their anatomical distribution but their stanniocalcin is more similar in molecular weight to that present in at least one other non-teleost actinopterygian (the gar) which has an ancient lineage.