Retinofugal projections in the lepidosirenid lungfishes
- 15 August 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Comparative Neurology
- Vol. 174 (4) , 553-573
- https://doi.org/10.1002/cne.901740402
Abstract
Autoradiographic and silver methods indicate that the African and South American lungfishes, Protopterus and Lepidosiren, lack ipsilateral retinal projections. Contralaterally, the retina projects to the preoptic nucleus of the hypothalamus, to four discrete areas located in the lateral neuropil of the thalamus, to a superficial pretectal neuropil, to the upper half of the tectal neuropil, and to a laterally situated basal optic neuropil located in the rostral tegmentum. The overall pattern of the primary retinofugal projections is markedly similar to that of amphibians which suggests that lungfishes may be more closely related to amphibians than to actinopterygian fishes. Neotenic trends in both lepidosirenid lungfishes and urodeles may be expressions of parallelism, hence Latimeria and Neoceratodus must be examined to resolve this phylogenetic problem. A 300‐fold range in the size of the eye, indicated by the number of ganglion cells present, occurs among lungfishes, salamanders and frogs. This variation may have implications for recognizing the morphological expression of selection operating on the visual systems of lepidosirenids and amphibians.This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
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