1960
DOI: 10.1002/jmor.1051060105
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The osteocranium of the catostomid fish, catostomus macrocheilus. A study in adaptation and natural relationship

Abstract: Although suckers are among the commonest of the fresh-water fishes of North America, surprisingly little study has been devoted to their osteology and its remarkable adaptation for suctorial feeding. The most complete description is given by Sagemehl in his 1891 investigations on the cranium of cyprinoid fishes. Since that time, Edwards ('26) has discussed the protractile apparatus of the mouth of catostomid fishes, and Gregory ('33) in his classic work on fish skulls has a short section on catostomids based i… Show more

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Cited by 32 publications
(34 citation statements)
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“…This is not surprising, considering the complexity of the inductive and morphogenetic interactions that control the development of complex structures such as the vertebrate head (Grobstein, 1967;Hall, 1987). Conservative ossification sequences are also to be expected on functional grounds; the bones first formed are those that serve early functional demands and that are subjected to the greatest muscular stresses (Weisel, 1960;Shaeffer, 1961). For example, among the initial bones to ossify in poeciliids are the maxillae, dentaries, opercles, and cleithra, all of which are associated with jaw movement and respiration (Gosline, 1971).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is not surprising, considering the complexity of the inductive and morphogenetic interactions that control the development of complex structures such as the vertebrate head (Grobstein, 1967;Hall, 1987). Conservative ossification sequences are also to be expected on functional grounds; the bones first formed are those that serve early functional demands and that are subjected to the greatest muscular stresses (Weisel, 1960;Shaeffer, 1961). For example, among the initial bones to ossify in poeciliids are the maxillae, dentaries, opercles, and cleithra, all of which are associated with jaw movement and respiration (Gosline, 1971).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An anterior cranial fontanelle is observed in †Amyzon [41] and Ictiobus bubalus, Carpiodes carpio (belonging to the Ictiobinae), Cycleptus elongatus, Myxocyprinus asiaticus (referred to the Cycleptinae), whereas it is lacking in the rest of species. Our own observations and the information from the literature suggest the absence of an anterior cranial fontanelle in all catostomines [1,16,19,42,43] , whereas the frontopariental fontenelle is present in all known catostomids except Cycleptus. The fontanelle is present in most species of †Amyzon, but its presence or absence in Vasnetsovia is not clear.…”
Section: Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…39B). Weisel (1960) termed this ossification a ''supplementary basihyal''. Catostomids and homalopterids are described by Nelson (1969) as possessing a ''single large ossification also fitting between the ventral hypohyals''.…”
Section: Sublingual Bone Development and Homologiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the early ossification of the skull (Weisel, 1967) and the adult osteocranium (Weisel, 1960) have been described for Catostomus macrocheilus (Cypriniformes: Catostomidae), and the early development of the chondrocranium and splanchnocranium was described as part of a general developmental study for C. commersonii (McElman and Balon, 1980), pharyngeal arch development has not been described in comprehensive detail for a catostomid. We focused on the median elements of the arches in particular because of their phylogenetic variation in number and position in Cypriniformes.…”
mentioning
confidence: 97%