67 research outputs found
STAGES IN THE ORIGIN OF VERTEBRATES: ANALYSIS BY MEANS OF SCENARIOS
Vertebrates lack an epidermal nerve plexus. This feature is common to many invertebrates from which vertebrates differ by an extensive set of shared-derived characters (synapomorphies) derived from the neural crest and epidermal neurogenic placodes. Hence, the hypothesis that the developmental precursor of the epidermal nerve plexus may be homologous to the neural crest and epidermal neurogenic placodes. This account attempts to generate a nested set of scenarios for the prevertebrate-vertebrate transition, associating a presumed sequence of behavioural and environmental changes with the observed phenotypic ones. Toward this end, it integrates morphological, developmental, functional (physiological/behavioural) and some ecological data, as many phenotypic shifts apparently involved associated transitions in several aspects of the animals. The scenarios deal with the origin of embryonic and adult tissues and such major organs as the notochord, the CNS, gills and kidneys and propose a sequence of associated changes. Alternative scenarios are stated as the evidence often remains insufficient for decision. The analysis points to gaps in comprehension of the biology of the animals and therefore suggests further research.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72629/1/j.1469-185X.1989.tb00471.x.pd
The Specificity of an Adaptive Filter That Suppresses Unwanted Reafference in Electrosensory Neurons of the Skate Medulla
Properties of Medullary Interneurons of the Skate Electrosense Provide Evidence for the Neural Circuitry Mediating Ventilatory Noise Suppression
Effects of Dietary ZnSo4 on the Growth and Feeding of the Tobacco Budworm, Heliothis virescens1
Second-Order Electroreceptive Cells in Skates Have Response Properties Dependent on the Configuration of Their Inhibitory Receptive Fields
An Anatomical Study of an Electric Organ and its Nerve Supply in the Electric Ray (Torpedinidae Narke japonica)
Contributions of the Leigh Marine Laboratory to marine science, 1962–2012: sensory neuroethology
The Phylogenetic Distribution of Electroreception: Evidence for Convergent Evolution of a Primitive Vertebrate Sense Modality
On the Coincidence of Loss of Electroreception and Reorganization of Brain Stem Nuclei in Vertebrates
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