|
NOMENCLATURE OF TURTLE CRANIAL MUSCULATURE
Appendix 1 and
Figure 5,
Figure 6,
Figure 7,
Figure 8,
Figure 9,
Figure 10,
Figure 11,
Figure 12,
Figure 13,
Figure 14, and
Figure 15 list all 88 cranium-associated muscular units ever described for turtles. I provide a list of synonyms, schematic illustrations, and descriptions for criteria of homology. When naming the muscular units, as far as possible I tried to keep the nomenclature of established literature and the traditional nomenclature to retain its historical background. For example, the m. pseudotemporalis (No. 23-24) was originally named referring to the temporalis muscle of humans. To differentiate its developmental and evolutionary identity, it received the somehow misguiding prefix "pseudo". Alternatively proposed terms such as "m. anterior" or "m. adductor mandibulae posterior Pars rostralis" (Schumacher 1953-54,
1954-55a;
Hacker 1954) are either of a rough topographical or a non-verified evolutionary identity of that structure (Figure 2,
Figure 3,
Figure 4; see below). Major differences to older nomenclature are on the handling of the terms Pars (portion) and musculus (muscle) and the descriptions of origin, insertion, and innervation are based on the broad scale analysis as presented herein. Some structures were either described or shown in literature, but not named or labelled at the same time. Those now gained names in the presented study.
In the following survey, I discuss the evolutionary identity of some critical structures and argue for the terminology as introduced within (Appendix 1). A word of caution: Currently no consensus exists about the developmental, evolutionary, or functionary identity of several cranium-associated muscles in turtles (Edgeworth 1935;
Rieppel 1990;
Eger 2006). Hence, the presented nomenclature of muscles are of a preliminary kind, and the identity and homology of several muscles still have to be tested in more comprehensive studies.
|