4.1 Article

Development of the Pharyngeal Arch Skeleton in Catostomus commersonii (Teleostei: Cypriniformes)

Journal

JOURNAL OF MORPHOLOGY
Volume 270, Issue 3, Pages 291-305

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jmor.10688

Keywords

Cypriniformes; development; skeleton; Catostomus commersonii; pharyngeal arches

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DEB 0431290]

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Skeletal elements of the gill arches of adult cypriniform fishes vary widely in number, size, and shape and are important characters in morphologically based phylogenetic studies. Understanding the developmental basis for this variation is thus phylogenetically significant but also important in relation to the many developmental genetic and molecularly based studies of the early developing and hence experimentally tractable gill arches in the zebrafish, a cyprinid cypriniform. We describe the. sequence of the chondrification and ossification of the pharyngeal arches and associated dermal bones from Catostomus commersonii (Catostomidae, Cypriniformes) and make selected comparisons to other similarly described pharyngeal arches. We noted shared spatial trends in arch development including the formation of ventral cartilages before dorsal and anterior cartilages before posterior. Qualitatively variable gill arch elements in Cypriniformes including pharyngobranchial 1, pharyngobranchial 4, and the sublingual are the last such elements to chondrify in C. commersonii. We show that the sublingual bone in C. commersonii has two cartilaginous precursors that fuse and ossify to form the single bone in adults. This indicates homology of the sublingual in catostomids to the two sublingual bones in the adults of cobitids and balitorids. Intriguing patterns of fusion and segmentation of the cartilages in the pharyngeal arches were discovered, These include the individuation of the basihyal and anterior copula through segmentation of a single cartilage rod, fusion of cartilaginous basibranchials 4 and 5, and fusion of hypobranchial 4 with ceratobranchial 4, Such fluidity in cartilage patterning may be widespread in fishes and requires further comparative developmental studies. J. Morphol. 270:291 305, 2009. (C) 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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