Abstract

The adductor mandibulae complex has been a subject of discussion and uncertainties due to a wide range of differentiations that have occurred in teleosts during evolution. In Siluroidei a specific modification of a part of the muscle complex has resulted in the formation of a retractor muscle of the maxillary barbel. The main part of the muscle complex, responsible for the closure of the mouth, has undergone some changes as well, which are at the base of the homology problems encountered by different authors. In this paper the muscles have been studied in three ontogenetic stages of the siluroid Clarias gariepinus (Clariidae); two of them have been described. Based on the ontogenetic evidence and the literature, the following muscles are recognized: 1) the very weakly differentiated adductor mandibulae A2 A'3 , where only little distinction can be made between the A2 and the A'3 muscle parts, and 2) the adductor mandibulae A"3 . Caudally, both muscles are separated from each other by the levator arcus palatini, but are fused together anteriorly, inserting onto the lower jaw. In juvenile C. gariepinus, a differentiation has occurred in the A"3 muscle, thereby forming a distinct pars superficialis and a pars profunda. No A1 nor an Aω muscle is present. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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