| Literature DB >> 32064616 |
Carole J Burrow1, Michael J Newman2, Jan L den Blaauwen3.
Abstract
Spiracles are a general character of gnathostomes (jawed fishes), being present in antiarch placoderms, commonly regarded as the most basal gnathostome group. The presence of spiracular tubes in acanthodians has been deduced from grooves on the neurocranium of the derived acanthodiform Acanthodes bronni from the Permian of Germany, but until now these tubes were presumed to lack an external opening, rendering them non-functional. Here we describe the external spiracular elements in specimens of the Middle Devonian acanthodiforms Cheiracanthus murchisoni, Cheiracanthus latus and Mesacanthus pusillus from northern Scotland, and the internal structure of these elements in C. murchisoni, demonstrating that the spiracle in acanthodiforms differed from all known extant and extinct fishes in having paired cartilage-pseudobranch structures. This arrangement represents a transitional state between the presumed basal gnathostome condition with an unconstricted first gill slit (as yet not identified in any fossil) and the derived condition with a spiracle and a single pseudobranch derived from the posterior hemibranch of the mandibular arch. We identify the main tissue forming the pseudobranch as elastic cartilage, a tissue previously unrecorded in fossils.Entities:
Keywords: branchial skeleton; mineralised cartilage; pseudobranch; spiracular function; stem Chondrichthyes
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32064616 PMCID: PMC7219616 DOI: 10.1111/joa.13170
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anat ISSN: 0021-8782 Impact factor: 2.921