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Evolution of the premaxillary fraenum and substratum in snubnose darters and allies (Percidae: Etheostoma)
Authors:P J Ciccotto  T C Mendelson
Institution:1. Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, U.S.A.;2. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD, U.S.A.
Abstract:Darters (Percidae: Etheostomatinae), a species‐rich group of North American freshwater fishes, vary in the presence of a premaxillary fraenum, a strip of skin that connects the premaxillary bones to the snout, and it is hypothesized that this trait is a trophic adaptation to particular substrata. Ancestral state reconstructions and analyses of phylogenetic associations between presence of the premaxillary fraenum and preferred stream substratum were conducted in a clade of closely related darters (snubnose darters and allies) that vary in morphology and habitat preferences. The most recent common ancestor of this clade was inferred to possess a fraenum and to inhabit rocky substrata, consistent with previous hypotheses, but a significant correlation between fraenum presence and substratum type across the phylogeny was not found.
Keywords:ancestral state reconstruction  benthic habitat  ecomorphology  Ulocentra
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