The extant lungfish, including three genera, the Australian, South American and African lungfishes, retain a dentition that appeared first in the Devonian, in some of the oldest members of this group. The dentition consists of permanent tooth plates with persistent cusps that appear early in development of the fish. The cusps, separate early in development, form ridges that are arranged in a radiating pattern, and fusion of the cusps to each other and to the underlying jaw bone produces a tooth plate. The lungfish dentition is based on a template of mantle dentine that surrounds bone trabeculae enclosed in the tooth plate. The mantle layer is covered by enamel. In most derived dipnoans, this framework encloses two further forms of dentine, ...
Vertebrate dentitions are extraordinarily diverse in both morphology and regenerative capacity. The ...
Ramsay Heatly Traquair, the eminent Victorian Scottish palaeichthyologist and museum curator, procur...
The postcranial skeletons of two upper Givetian lungfishes from Mt. Howitt, Victoria, Australia, sho...
Tooth plate formation in the Queensland lungfish, Neoceratodus forsteri, Krefft begins with simple g...
While the lungfish dentition is partially understood as far as morphology and light microscopic stru...
The histology of developing toothplates of Neoceratodusforsteri from the time of first appearance of...
The Australian lungfish, Neoceratodus forsteri, has a dentition consisting of enamel, mantle dentine...
Developmental studies of the Recent Australian lungfish, Neoceratodus forsteri, show that this speci...
Although the lungfish (Dipnoi) belong within the Osteichthyes, their dentitions are radically differ...
Most lungfish tooth plates, that are arranged in radiating ridges derived from the fusion of separat...
Lungfish of the tooth-plated lineage, both fossil and living, may be affected by alterations in the ...
A new species of dipnoan, Chirodipterus potteri, is described, based on a series of juvenile tooth p...
Many lungfish of the tooth plated lineage, both fossil and living, are affected by dental and skelet...
Environmentally-related wear conditions and pathologies affecting the dentition of fossil lungfish f...
The permanent tooth plates of the Australian lungfish, Neoceratodus forsteri, are covered by enamel ...
Vertebrate dentitions are extraordinarily diverse in both morphology and regenerative capacity. The ...
Ramsay Heatly Traquair, the eminent Victorian Scottish palaeichthyologist and museum curator, procur...
The postcranial skeletons of two upper Givetian lungfishes from Mt. Howitt, Victoria, Australia, sho...
Tooth plate formation in the Queensland lungfish, Neoceratodus forsteri, Krefft begins with simple g...
While the lungfish dentition is partially understood as far as morphology and light microscopic stru...
The histology of developing toothplates of Neoceratodusforsteri from the time of first appearance of...
The Australian lungfish, Neoceratodus forsteri, has a dentition consisting of enamel, mantle dentine...
Developmental studies of the Recent Australian lungfish, Neoceratodus forsteri, show that this speci...
Although the lungfish (Dipnoi) belong within the Osteichthyes, their dentitions are radically differ...
Most lungfish tooth plates, that are arranged in radiating ridges derived from the fusion of separat...
Lungfish of the tooth-plated lineage, both fossil and living, may be affected by alterations in the ...
A new species of dipnoan, Chirodipterus potteri, is described, based on a series of juvenile tooth p...
Many lungfish of the tooth plated lineage, both fossil and living, are affected by dental and skelet...
Environmentally-related wear conditions and pathologies affecting the dentition of fossil lungfish f...
The permanent tooth plates of the Australian lungfish, Neoceratodus forsteri, are covered by enamel ...
Vertebrate dentitions are extraordinarily diverse in both morphology and regenerative capacity. The ...
Ramsay Heatly Traquair, the eminent Victorian Scottish palaeichthyologist and museum curator, procur...
The postcranial skeletons of two upper Givetian lungfishes from Mt. Howitt, Victoria, Australia, sho...