Growth and patterning in the conodont skeleton

Author:

Donoghue Philip C. J.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geology, University of Leicester, University Road, Leicester LE1 7RH, UK

Abstract

Recent advances in our understanding of conodont palaeobiology and functional morphology have rendered established hypotheses of element growth untenable. In order to address this problem, hard tissue histology is reviewed paying particular attention to the relationships during growth of the component hard tissues comprising conodont elements, and ignoring a priori assumptions of the homologies of these tissues. Conodont element growth is considered further in terms of the pattern of formation, of which four distinct types are described, all possibly derived from a primitive condition after heterochronic changes in the timing of various developmental stages. It is hoped that this may provide further means of unravelling conodont phylogeny. The manner in which the tissues grew is considered homologous with other vertebrate hard tissues, and the elements appear to have grown in a way similar to the growing scales and growing dentition of other vertebrates.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference174 articles.

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2. Aldridge R. J. & Briggs D. E. G. 1986 Conodonts. In Problematic fossil taxa. Oxford monographs on geology and geophysics no. 5 (ed. A. Ho¡man & M. H. Nitecki) pp. 227^239. New York: Oxford University Press.

3. Aldridge R. J. & Donoghue P. C. J. 1997 Conodonts: a sister group to hag¢sh? In The biology of hag¢shes (ed. J. M. J. JÖrgensen J. P. Lomholt R. E. Weber H. Malte). London: Chapman & Hall.

4. Aldridge R. J. & Purnell M. A. 1996 The conodont controversies.Trends Ecol. Evol. 11 463^468.

5. Aldridge R. J. & Smith M. P. 1993 Conodonta. In The fossil record vol. 2 (ed. M. J. Benton) pp. 563^572. London: Chapman & Hall.

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