The larval attachment organ of the bowfin Amia ocellicauda Richardson, 1836 (Amiiformes: Amiidae) and its phylogenetic significance

Author:

Pinion Amanda K.1ORCID,Britz Ralf2,Kubicek Kole M.3,Siegel Dustin S.4,Conway Kevin W.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Conservation Biology and Biodiversity Research and Teaching Collections Texas A&M University College Station Texas USA

2. Senckenberg Naturhistorische Sammlungen Dresden Dresden Germany

3. Department of Biology Lamar University Beaumont Texas USA

4. Department of Biology Southeast Missouri State University Cape Girardeau Missouri USA

Abstract

AbstractLarval attachment organs (LAOs) are unicellular or multicellular organs that enable the larvae of many actinopterygian fishes to adhere to a substrate before yolk‐sac absorption and the free‐swimming stage. Bowfins (Amiiformes) exhibit a sizable LAO on the snout, which was first described in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. In this study, we document the LAO of Amia ocellicauda (Richardson, 1836) using a combination of scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and light microscopy, and histochemistry. We examined material representing three stages with SEM ranging in size from 5.8 to 11.2 mm in notochord length and one stage histochemically. We compare the LAO of A. ocellicauda to that of the lepisosteid Atractosteus tropicus Gill, 1863 and show that although the LAOs of A. ocellicauda and A. tropicus are both super‐organs, the two differ in the ultrastructure of the entire organ. A. ocellicauda possesses two distinct lobes, with the organs arranged on the periphery with none in the middle, whereas A. tropicus also possesses two lobes, but with the organs scattered evenly across the super‐organ. The individual organs of A. ocellicauda possess adhesive cells set deep to support cells with the adhesive substance released through a pore, whereas A. tropicus possesses both support cells and adhesive cells sitting at a similar level, with the adhesive substance released directly onto the surface of the organ. We additionally provide a table summarizing vertebrate genera in which attachment organs have been documented and discuss the implications of our study for hypotheses of the homology of attachment organs in the Holostei.

Funder

College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Texas A and M University

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Aquatic Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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