R. Bauchot et al., THE EPIBRANCHIAL ORGAN, ITS INNERVATION AND ITS PROBABLE FUNCTIONING IN HETEROTIS-NILOTICUS (PISCES, TELEOSTEI, OSTEOGLOSSIDAE), Environmental biology of fishes, 37(3), 1993, pp. 307-315
The high level of encephalization in Heterotis niloticus is due, in pa
rt, to a voluminous lobus vagalis, which has the form of a cauliflower
and receives the fibers of a strong branch of the 10th (vagal) nerve.
This vagal branch comes from a special branchial apparatus, the epibr
anchial organ, considered to be an air-breathing organ by some, and a
microphagous apparatus by others. This organ has a spiral, snail-like
form and its lumen is a blind-alley. Its study in a juvenile fish 10 c
m SL shows that it has two canals: a peripheric one for water entrance
and a central one for food exit. The epithelium between these two can
als contains numerous gustatory buds, the innervation of which constit
utes the branch of the vagal nerve. This epithelium is also very rich
in mucous cells, which probably correspond to a muco-microphagous feed
ing apparatus. The exit canal, which receives the mucous string enrich
ed with food particles, enters directly into the oesophagus. Striated
muscles, attaching along the spiral tours of the epibranchial organ, p
robably serve as the motor that pumps water in and out and supplies th
e classical ciliary apparatus of the mucophagous feeding organs.