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Main Authors: Smith-Vaniz, William F, Klein, Julia, Ahnelt, Harald
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: Journal of morphology 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39425485/
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author Smith-Vaniz, William F
Klein, Julia
Ahnelt, Harald
author_facet Smith-Vaniz, William F
Klein, Julia
Ahnelt, Harald
Smith-Vaniz, William F
Klein, Julia
Ahnelt, Harald
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Hyperostosis in Fishes: An Update With New Species Records. Smith-Vaniz, William F Klein, Julia Ahnelt, Harald Animals Fishes Hyperostosis Phylogeny Bone and Bones Species Specificity Literature reports of hyperostosis are often misleading and have been confused with osteomas, a pathological condition. Hyperostotic bones are known to occur only in bony fishes of the class Actinopterygii, within at least 16 orders, 35 families, 89 genera, and 153 species. They are present almost exclusively in marine fishes and exceptionally in a few extinct freshwater species known from hypersaline environments and one extant cichlid. Hyperostosis is best represented in the family Carangidae where it is known to occur in 53 of approximately 181 valid species. We also provide a synthetic report on what we know and what misconceptions exist regarding hyperostosis. Patterns of hyperostosis are often species-specific but provide no useful phylogenetic information. In species known to develop hyperostosis, it is usually not apparent (non-histologically) in juveniles and typically only becomes fully developed in the largest individuals. The timing of hyperostosis on-set in different bones is often sequential rather than simultaneous across different bones. Most marine Neoteleostei have acellular skeletons but histological observations have shown that in species exhibiting hyperostosis, areas of active remodeling are composed primarily of cellular bone characterized by a rich vascular network and bone-resorbing osteoclasts.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_39425485
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2024
publisher Journal of morphology
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Hyperostosis in Fishes: An Update With New Species Records.
Smith-Vaniz, William F
Klein, Julia
Ahnelt, Harald
Animals
Fishes
Hyperostosis
Phylogeny
Bone and Bones
Species Specificity
Hyperostosis in Fishes: An Update With New Species Records. Smith-Vaniz, William F Klein, Julia Ahnelt, Harald Animals Fishes Hyperostosis Phylogeny Bone and Bones Species Specificity Literature reports of hyperostosis are often misleading and have been confused with osteomas, a pathological condition. Hyperostotic bones are known to occur only in bony fishes of the class Actinopterygii, within at least 16 orders, 35 families, 89 genera, and 153 species. They are present almost exclusively in marine fishes and exceptionally in a few extinct freshwater species known from hypersaline environments and one extant cichlid. Hyperostosis is best represented in the family Carangidae where it is known to occur in 53 of approximately 181 valid species. We also provide a synthetic report on what we know and what misconceptions exist regarding hyperostosis. Patterns of hyperostosis are often species-specific but provide no useful phylogenetic information. In species known to develop hyperostosis, it is usually not apparent (non-histologically) in juveniles and typically only becomes fully developed in the largest individuals. The timing of hyperostosis on-set in different bones is often sequential rather than simultaneous across different bones. Most marine Neoteleostei have acellular skeletons but histological observations have shown that in species exhibiting hyperostosis, areas of active remodeling are composed primarily of cellular bone characterized by a rich vascular network and bone-resorbing osteoclasts.
title Hyperostosis in Fishes: An Update With New Species Records.
topic Animals
Fishes
Hyperostosis
Phylogeny
Bone and Bones
Species Specificity
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39425485/