Abstract

Alternative hypotheses had been advanced as to the components forming the elongate fin coursing along the ventral margin of much of the body and tail from behind the abdominal region to the posterior margin of the tail in the Electric Eel, Electrophorus electricus. Although the original species description indicated that this fin was a composite of the caudal fin plus the elongate anal fin characteristic of other genera of the Gymnotiformes, subsequent researchers proposed that the posterior region of the fin was formed by the extension of the anal fin posteriorly to the tip of the tail, thereby forming a “false caudal fin.” Examination of ontogenetic series of the genus reveal that Electrophorus possesses a true caudal fin formed of a terminal centrum, hypural plate and a low number of caudal-fin rays. The confluence of the two fins is proposed as an additional autapomorphy for the genus. Under all alternative proposed hypotheses of relationships within the order Gymnotiformes, the presence of a caudal fin in Electrophorus optimized as being independent of the occurence of the morphologically equivalent structure in the Apteronotidae. Possible functional advantages to the presence of a caudal fin in the genus are discussed.

Highlights

  • The order Gymnotiformes includes 33 genera and more than 200 extant species of Neotropical electric fishes plus one fossil form from the Late Miocene of Bolivia [1,2]

  • Caudal fin skeletal morphology was assessed via radiographs and specimens cleared and counterstained for bone and cartilage following the procedure of Taylor & Van Dyke [19]

  • The alternative accepted scenario was that the anal fin extended posteriorly to the end of tail in Electrophorus and formed what has been termed a false caudal fin [1,17,20,21,22,23,24,25]

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Summary

Introduction

The order Gymnotiformes includes 33 genera and more than 200 extant species of Neotropical electric fishes plus one fossil form from the Late Miocene of Bolivia [1,2]. The details of the unusual tail along the ventral and posterior margins of the body in Electrophorus have not been the subject of analysis to evaluate the two alternative hypotheses – that the fin at the posterior of the tail is a true caudal fin versus that the terminal portion of the elongate fin in the genus is a posterior extension of the anal fin to form a false caudal fin.

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