Morphometric analysis of lungfish endocasts elucidates early dipnoan palaeoneurological evolution

Author:

Clement Alice M1ORCID,Challands Tom J2,Cloutier Richard3,Houle Laurent3,Ahlberg Per E4ORCID,Collin Shaun P5,Long John A1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Science and Engineering, Flinders University

2. School of Geosciences, University of Edinburgh

3. Département de Biologie, Chimie et Géographie, Université du Québec à Rimouski

4. Subdepartment of Evolution and Development, Department of Organismal Biology, Uppsala University

5. School of Life Sciences, La Trobe University

Abstract

The lobe-finned fish, lungfish (Dipnoi, Sarcoptergii), have persisted for ~400 million years from the Devonian Period to present day. The evolution of their dermal skull and dentition is relatively well understood, but this is not the case for the central nervous system. While the brain has poor preservation potential and is not currently known in any fossil lungfish, substantial indirect information about it and associated structures (e.g. labyrinths) can be obtained from the cranial endocast. However, before the recent development of X-ray tomography as a palaeontological tool, these endocasts could not be studied non-destructively, and few detailed studies were undertaken. Here, we describe and illustrate the endocasts of six Palaeozoic lungfish from tomographic scans. We combine these with six previously described digital lungfish endocasts (4 fossil and 2 recent taxa) into a 12-taxon dataset for multivariate morphometric analysis using 17 variables. We find that the olfactory region is more highly plastic than the hindbrain, and undergoes significant elongation in several taxa. Further, while the semicircular canals covary as an integrated module, the utriculus and sacculus vary independently of each other. Functional interpretation suggests that olfaction has remained a dominant sense throughout lungfish evolution, and changes in the labyrinth may potentially reflect a change from nektonic to near-shore environmental niches. Phylogenetic implications show that endocranial form fails to support monophyly of the ‘chirodipterids’. Those with elongated crania similarly fail to form a distinct clade, suggesting these two paraphyletic groups have converged towards either head elongation or truncation driven by non-phylogenetic constraints.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Flinders University

Knut och Alice Wallenbergs Stiftelse

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Callidus Services Ltd UK

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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