Abstract
A complex of three muscles (one lateral, one intermediate and one medial in position) in the clearnose skate, Raja eglanteria, is believed to be wholly, or in part, homologous to the cucullaris (trapezius). The retrograde transport of horseradish peroxidase was used to discover the central location of the motoneurons that supply each of these muscles. Motoneurons that project to the lateral muscle occupy the caudal part of the ventral nucleus of X. This nucleus is situated ventrolateral to the dorsal vagal motor column at caudal medullary levels, and lateral to the main ventral motor column of the rostral spinal cord. The axons of these motoneurons exit the medulla within the caudal vagal rootlets and course peripherally within the intestinal (visceral) ramus of the vagus nerve. Motoneurons that innervate the intermediate and medial muscles are located along the ventral border of the ventral column of gray at spinal cord segments 10–15. Their axons course peripherally within the ventral roots of spinal nerves. The caudal ventral nucleus of X, the nerve that supplies the lateral muscle, and the lateral muscle are likely homologues of the accessory nucleus, accessory nerve, and cucullaris (trapezius), respectively, among other fishes and tetrapods. Intermediate and medial muscles, based on the central location of motoneurons that supply them, are part of the longitudinal epaxial musculature and are not part of a trapezius complex.
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