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Function of a key morphological innovation: fusion of the cichlid pharyngeal jaw

By Hulsey, Darrin C

Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B, 273(1587):669-675 22-Mar-2006. DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2005.3375


" The pharyngeal jaw of cichlids may represent a key innovation that facilitated their unparalleled trophic divergence. In cichlids, ‘fusion’ of the lower pharyngeal jaw (LPJ) results from suturing between the two lower ceratobranchials. To examine, what novel abilities a more extensively fused pharyngeal jaw may confer, the function of LPJ suturing was examined in Heroine cichlids. Greater LPJ suturing, pharyngeal jaw splitting under compression and the forces used to crush molluscs in the wild suggest increased LPJ fusion in the trophically polymorphic Herichthys minckleyi operates to strengthen the pharyngeal jaw. Among Heroine cichlid species, the presence of an external LPJ suture and feeding specialization on molluscs was evolutionarily quite variable, but greater LPJ fusion estimated from the amount of external suturing was highly correlated with molluscivory. Throughout cichlid diversification, increased pharyngeal jaw fusion via suturing has likely helped to reinforce the LPJ during pharyngeal processing thereby facilitating the ability of cichlids to exploit durable prey "

Language: English

Hulsey, Darrin C. 2006. "Function of a key morphological innovation: fusion of the cichlid pharyngeal jaw". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B. 273(1587):669-675. DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2005.3375 (ffm00791) (abstract)