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Cephalic muscle development in the Australian lungfish,Neoceratodus forsteri
Authors:Janine M Ziermann  Alice M Clement  Rolf Ericsson  Lennart Olsson
Institution:1. Department of Anatomy, Howard University College of Medicine, Washington, DC;2. Department of Organismal Biology, Evolutionary Biology Centre, Uppsala University, Norbyv?gen 18A, Uppsala, Sweden;3. School of Biological Sciences, College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia;4. Laboratory for the Study of Craniofacial Evolution & Development, Vinicna 7, Charles University in Prague, Prague, Czech Republic;5. Institut für Zoologie und Evolutionsforschung, Friedrich‐Schiller‐Universit?t Jena, Jena, Germany
Abstract:Lungfishes are the extant sister group of tetrapods. As such, they are important for the study of evolutionary processes involved in the water to land transition of vertebrates. The evolution of a true neck, that is, the complete separation of the pectoral girdle from the cranium, is one of the most intriguing morphological transitions known among vertebrates. Other salient changes involve new adaptations for terrestrial feeding, which involves both the cranium and its associated musculature. Historically, the cranium has been extensively investigated, but the development of the cranial muscles much less so. Here, we present a detailed study of cephalic muscle development in the Australian lungfish, Neoceratodus forsteri, which is considered to be the sister taxon to all other extant lungfishes. Neoceratodus shows several developmental patterns previously described in other taxa; the tendency of muscles to develop from anterior to posterior, from their region of origin toward insertion, and from lateral to ventral/medial (outside‐in), at least in the branchial arches. The m.protractor pectoralis appears to develop as an extension of the most posterior m.levatores arcuum branchialium, supporting the hypothesis that the m.cucullaris and its derivatives (protractor pectoralis, levatores arcuum branchialium) are branchial muscles. We present a new hypothesis regarding the homology of the ventral branchial arch muscles (subarcualis recti and obliqui, transversi ventrales) in lungfishes and amphibians. Moreover, the morphology and development of the cephalic muscles confirms that extant lungfishes are neotenic and have been strongly influenced via paedomorphosis during their evolutionary history.
Keywords:cranial muscles  Dipnoi  heterochrony  neoteny  ontogeny  paedomorphosis
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