Abstract
Auditory reception in elasmobranchs, teleosts and amphibians may be mediated by various inner-ear sensory epithelia1–3, including the basilar papilla, which seems to be the precursor of the cochlea in mammals. The origin of the basilar papilla remains a major unsolved problem for understanding the evolution of hearing in terrestrial vertebrates4–6. Study of living species indicates that the basilar papilla is a unique feature of tetrapods6,7, but palaeonto-logical data indicate that this epithelium as well as a middle ear, is already present in crossopterygian fish8–10. However, no basilar papilla has been found in the only living crossopterygian species, the coelacanth Latimeria chalumnae11. I have re-examined the inner ear of adult and embryonic Latimeria and find a membranous specialization which resembles in structure, position and innerva-tion pattern the basilar papilla of tetrapods, in particular amniotes. No epithelium comparable to the basilar papilla was found in lungfish. I suggest that the basilar papillae of Latimeria and tetrapods are homologous and evolved only once in their common ancestor.
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References
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Fritzsch, B. Inner ear of the coelacanth fish Latimeria has tetrapod affinities. Nature 327, 153–154 (1987). https://doi.org/10.1038/327153a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/327153a0
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