. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Zoology . 34 P. H. GREENWOOD. Fig. 51. Neurocranial form in piscivorous predators. (Scale = 3 mm.) To the eight species originally placed in the ' serranus' group (H. serranus [Text-fig. 11], H. victorianus, H. nyanzae, H. speki [Text-fig. 12], H. maculipinna [Text-fig. 47], H. boops, H. thuragnathus and H. pachycephalias ; see Greenwood, 1967), three others should be added, viz H. cavifrons [Text-fig. 3], H. plagiostoma [Text-fig. 47] and H. decticostoma (see Greenwood, 1967; Greenwood & Gee, 1969). Neurocranial morphology i
. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Zoology . 34 P. H. GREENWOOD. Fig. 51. Neurocranial form in piscivorous predators. (Scale = 3 mm.) To the eight species originally placed in the ' serranus' group (H. serranus [Text-fig. 11], H. victorianus, H. nyanzae, H. speki [Text-fig. 12], H. maculipinna [Text-fig. 47], H. boops, H. thuragnathus and H. pachycephalias ; see Greenwood, 1967), three others should be added, viz H. cavifrons [Text-fig. 3], H. plagiostoma [Text-fig. 47] and H. decticostoma (see Greenwood, 1967; Greenwood & Gee, 1969). Neurocranial morphology in all thiee species (Text-figs 47 and 57) is typically that of the 'serranus' lineage, despite the rather atypical general facies of H. cavifrons and H. plagiostoma (Text-fig. 3). Indeed, apart from these two species the 'serranus' lineage has a. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original British Museum (Natural History). London : BM(NH)
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