Literature DB >> 9645297

Dentition and dentigerous bones in juveniles and adults of Polypterus senegalus (Cladistia, Actinopterygii).

G Clemen1, P Bartsch, K Wacker.   

Abstract

Tooth types, their arrangement and the mode of tooth replacement were studied in juvenile and adult specimens of Polypterus senegalus by means of scanning electron microscopy of cleared and stained specimens as well as sections. All the dermal bones of the oropharynx are almost completely covered with teeth except for the angulare. The same is true for the branchial apparatus where only the hyoid skeleton is toothless. The teeth are uniformly monocuspid and conical, but can be classified according to shape and size into three types. These types and the mode of tooth replacement are characteristic for each dermal bone. In some of the jaw bones each tooth possesses a lingually situated replacement tooth. This is true for the teeth of the premaxillary, the maxillary, and the dentary which are arranged in a single line, and those of the dermopalatine, the coronoids, and the vomer which are in several lines and graded in size. Replacement teeth of all the other dentigerous elements develop on top of existing pulpal openings, forming an anastomosing common pulpal complex only after resorption of the previous tooth. The tooth plates of the dermal bones of the branchial apparatus are connected by syndesmosis only to the perichondrally ossified and to the cartilaginous or connective tissue material of the elements of the gill-arches. The dentition and its association with the bones of the head in Polypterus senegalus bear resemblances to advanced actinopterygians on the one hand (e.g. differentiation of tooth-types, arrangement), but also some similarities to living Amphibia (anchoring material and mode of replacement) on the other. The accentuation of a single marginal line of large teeth in both, the outer and the inner dental arcade of the jaws is a peculiarity of Polypterus that in a way parallels the derived state of similar monolinear tooth arrangements in Actinopterygii and Tetrapoda.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9645297     DOI: 10.1016/S0940-9602(98)80076-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Anat        ISSN: 0940-9602            Impact factor:   2.698


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  6 in total

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