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Reconstructing the subcephalic musculature in Pucapampella and Ichthyostega

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JOURNAL OF MORPHOLOGY
卷 284, 期 12, 页码 -

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jmor.21648

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abducens nerve; basicranialis; head somites; neurocranium; notochord

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This study presents the reconstruction and functional evolution of the subcephalic musculature in various species of primitive fishes and early tetrapods. The muscular structure in these species played a role in holding together the anterior and posterior parts of the neurocranium during interactions with prey. In more advanced species, such as lungfish and certain fish species, the subcephalic muscles are involved in actively depressing the anterior part of the neurocranium. The majority of cartilaginous and bony fishes have reduced or lost the subcephalic musculature, but some species like hexanchid sharks and Polypterus retain specific subcephalic muscles.
We present new reconstructions of subcephalic musculature for the stem chondrichthyan Pucapampella, the tetrapodomorph fish Eusthenopteron, and the Devonian tetrapod Ichthyostega. These reconstructions are based on macroscopic dissections of the head muscles of an archaic shark Heptranchias and an archaic actinopterygian Polypterus, that are combined with functional considerations and a reappraisal of not widely known theoretical concepts from the past. The subcephalic, as well as the supracephalic, musculature is formed by four anterior myomeres. They are continuous with subsequent myomeres of the trunk, but are innervated by ventral nerve roots of the medulla oblongata and thus belong to the head. The fourth subcephalic myomere ends with its posterior myoseptum on the occiput in osteichthyans, but on the first vertebra in chondrichthyans. The original function of subcephalic and supracephalic muscles in basal gnathostomes supposedly was to hold together anterior and posterior parts of the neurocranium during interaction with prey, such as the backward-ripping prey dissection, hypothesized for Pucapampella. In sarcopterygian osteichthyans, subcephalic musculature is involved in active depression of the anterior part of the neurocranium; specialization of this mechanism resulted in a complete separation of m. subcephalicus from trunk myomeres in Latimeria. Fusion of anterior and posterior parts of the neurocranium has resulted in reduction of the subcephalic musculature in the majority of cartilaginous and bony fishes. However, hexanchid sharks retain three posterior subcephalic myomeres for backward-ripping prey dissection. Polypterus and Chauliodus have retained the subcephalic musculature, but its function has shifted to a depression of the whole neurocranium.

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