The body musculature of Arthrodire Placoderms

The exceptionally preserved Late Devonian (Frasnian) fishes from the Gogo Formation, Western Australia, have recently been recognized to contain, sometimes extensive, remains of musculature preserved in three dimensions. Mapping of preserved muscles in multiple specimens of two closely related arthr...

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Main Authors: Ahlberg, P., Trinajstic, Kate, Long, J.
Other Authors: University of Bristol
Format: Conference Paper
Published: The Palaeontology Association 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/8659
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author Ahlberg, P.
Trinajstic, Kate
Long, J.
author2 University of Bristol
author_facet University of Bristol
Ahlberg, P.
Trinajstic, Kate
Long, J.
author_sort Ahlberg, P.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The exceptionally preserved Late Devonian (Frasnian) fishes from the Gogo Formation, Western Australia, have recently been recognized to contain, sometimes extensive, remains of musculature preserved in three dimensions. Mapping of preserved muscles in multiple specimens of two closely related arthrodire placoderms, Compagopiscis and Incisoscutum, enable us to present the first partial map of the body musculature in a stem-group jawed vertebrate. In addition to the expected trunk and tail musculature of segmentally arranged myomeres, these placoderms show two areas of specialized muscular development. Dorsally, extending posteriorly from the rear margin of the skull roof across the nuchal gap and in under the median dorsal plate, are a pair of large muscles that contact each other in the midline and are flanked by a pair of smaller but otherwise similar muscles.These muscles, evidently modifications of the epaxial trunk musculature, must be the head elevators that rotated the head dorsally relative to the trunk armor. Ventrally, the posterior part of the abdominal musculature shows surprising complexity. Ventral to the ends of the segmental myomeres, an elongate, longitudinal, sharply defined belt of obliquely transverse muscle fibers without segmental arrangement extends along most of the length of the posteroventrolateral plate towards (and possibly reaching) the pelvis. Functionally, this may be linked to movement of the pelvic fin, erection of the clasper (in the male), and/or modulation of the movement of the tail base relative to the trunk armor during swimming. Developmentally, the arrangement of these muscle fibers at approximate right angles to the myomeric muscles suggests that they lie ventral to the "lateral somitic frontier", within the zone (also occupied by paired appendages) where muscles are repatterned by an interaction between somatic and lateral plate mesoderm. This is the first direct evidence for such muscles in a stem gnathostome.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-86592018-12-14T00:47:30Z The body musculature of Arthrodire Placoderms Ahlberg, P. Trinajstic, Kate Long, J. University of Bristol arthrodire placoderms musculature The exceptionally preserved Late Devonian (Frasnian) fishes from the Gogo Formation, Western Australia, have recently been recognized to contain, sometimes extensive, remains of musculature preserved in three dimensions. Mapping of preserved muscles in multiple specimens of two closely related arthrodire placoderms, Compagopiscis and Incisoscutum, enable us to present the first partial map of the body musculature in a stem-group jawed vertebrate. In addition to the expected trunk and tail musculature of segmentally arranged myomeres, these placoderms show two areas of specialized muscular development. Dorsally, extending posteriorly from the rear margin of the skull roof across the nuchal gap and in under the median dorsal plate, are a pair of large muscles that contact each other in the midline and are flanked by a pair of smaller but otherwise similar muscles.These muscles, evidently modifications of the epaxial trunk musculature, must be the head elevators that rotated the head dorsally relative to the trunk armor. Ventrally, the posterior part of the abdominal musculature shows surprising complexity. Ventral to the ends of the segmental myomeres, an elongate, longitudinal, sharply defined belt of obliquely transverse muscle fibers without segmental arrangement extends along most of the length of the posteroventrolateral plate towards (and possibly reaching) the pelvis. Functionally, this may be linked to movement of the pelvic fin, erection of the clasper (in the male), and/or modulation of the movement of the tail base relative to the trunk armor during swimming. Developmentally, the arrangement of these muscle fibers at approximate right angles to the myomeric muscles suggests that they lie ventral to the "lateral somitic frontier", within the zone (also occupied by paired appendages) where muscles are repatterned by an interaction between somatic and lateral plate mesoderm. This is the first direct evidence for such muscles in a stem gnathostome. 2009 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/8659 The Palaeontology Association restricted
spellingShingle arthrodire
placoderms
musculature
Ahlberg, P.
Trinajstic, Kate
Long, J.
The body musculature of Arthrodire Placoderms
title The body musculature of Arthrodire Placoderms
title_full The body musculature of Arthrodire Placoderms
title_fullStr The body musculature of Arthrodire Placoderms
title_full_unstemmed The body musculature of Arthrodire Placoderms
title_short The body musculature of Arthrodire Placoderms
title_sort body musculature of arthrodire placoderms
topic arthrodire
placoderms
musculature
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/8659