Living animals for comparison in studies of Mesozoic fossils.

Lungfish are timeless, starting in the Devonian and still found today. Unfortunately this does not mean that biologists and palaeontologists agree about the functional anatomies of dipnoans. Most lungfish that are sufficiently well preserved have an enlarged rib behind the head, known as the occipit...

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Main Author: Anne Kemp
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Mahasarakham University 2017-06-01
Series:Research & Knowledge
Subjects:
Online Access:https://stej.msu.ac.th/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/13-Anne.pdf
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author Anne Kemp
author_facet Anne Kemp
author_sort Anne Kemp
collection DOAJ
description Lungfish are timeless, starting in the Devonian and still found today. Unfortunately this does not mean that biologists and palaeontologists agree about the functional anatomies of dipnoans. Most lungfish that are sufficiently well preserved have an enlarged rib behind the head, known as the occipital or cranial rib. Biologists describe this rib in living lungfish as an aid to the suctorial activities of the fish, involving feeding, burrowing in the mud or drawing a current of air or water into the oral cavity, activities important to both groups of extant lungfish. The arrangement of the occipital rib in lungfish differs in neoceratodonts and lepidosirenids, because the morphology of the oral cavity and the throat differs in the two groups. Suctorial activities are important in most if not all lungfish, for feeding, breathing in air or water, or digging a hole in the substrate. However, presence of an occipital rib does not mean that the fish would have been an air breather
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spelling doaj.art-f278ed75f6484ad49bd5f22208237d752022-12-22T03:18:28ZengMahasarakham UniversityResearch & Knowledge2408-204X2630-04002017-06-0131495010.14456/randk.2017.13Living animals for comparison in studies of Mesozoic fossils.Anne Kemp0Environmental Futures Centre, Griffith University, 170 Kessels Road, Nathan, Brisbane, QLD 4111, AustraliaLungfish are timeless, starting in the Devonian and still found today. Unfortunately this does not mean that biologists and palaeontologists agree about the functional anatomies of dipnoans. Most lungfish that are sufficiently well preserved have an enlarged rib behind the head, known as the occipital or cranial rib. Biologists describe this rib in living lungfish as an aid to the suctorial activities of the fish, involving feeding, burrowing in the mud or drawing a current of air or water into the oral cavity, activities important to both groups of extant lungfish. The arrangement of the occipital rib in lungfish differs in neoceratodonts and lepidosirenids, because the morphology of the oral cavity and the throat differs in the two groups. Suctorial activities are important in most if not all lungfish, for feeding, breathing in air or water, or digging a hole in the substrate. However, presence of an occipital rib does not mean that the fish would have been an air breatherhttps://stej.msu.ac.th/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/13-Anne.pdfcontinuity of lungfish morphologyoccipital ribsuctorial feedingrespiration
spellingShingle Anne Kemp
Living animals for comparison in studies of Mesozoic fossils.
Research & Knowledge
continuity of lungfish morphology
occipital rib
suctorial feeding
respiration
title Living animals for comparison in studies of Mesozoic fossils.
title_full Living animals for comparison in studies of Mesozoic fossils.
title_fullStr Living animals for comparison in studies of Mesozoic fossils.
title_full_unstemmed Living animals for comparison in studies of Mesozoic fossils.
title_short Living animals for comparison in studies of Mesozoic fossils.
title_sort living animals for comparison in studies of mesozoic fossils
topic continuity of lungfish morphology
occipital rib
suctorial feeding
respiration
url https://stej.msu.ac.th/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/13-Anne.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT annekemp livinganimalsforcomparisoninstudiesofmesozoicfossils