Semithin and in particular ultrathin sections of the glandular subdivisions in the oviduct of the terrestrial egg laying, direct developing plethodontid salamanders Bolitoglossa pesruba and Oedipina uniformis revealed remarkable structural differences of secretory products between the two species and in B. pesrubra between the different subdivisions of the duct. In the latter species structure of the secretory granules confirmed the previously described histological differentiation of the glandular portion of the oviduct in four subdivisions. In the first subdivision most secretory granules were moderately electron-dense having a distinct osmiophilic core, in the second these cores are absent, in the third granules revealed a complex inner structure and in the fourth they are more or less homogeneous and electron dense. In O. uniformis, however, secretory granules were differently stained in semithin sections with toluidine blue, but showed a homogeneous moderately electron-dense appearance along the entire oviduct. As oviductal secretions form the generally multi-layered glycoproteinaceous egg jelly enveloping the ovum when passing down the oviduct, our results suggest that in terrestrial breeders considerable differences exist in these secretions even at the structural level and, therefore, very likely in number and nature of egg jelly layers.