Abstract
The motor pools of axial muscles in Florida water snakes (Nerodia fasciata pictiventris) were studied by applying horseradish peroxidase (HRP) to branches of spinal nerves innervating individual muscles or groups of muscles. Motor pools of different muscles or muscle groups were located in characteristic positions in both the transverse and the longitudinal extent of the motor column. Epaxial pools were located ventromedially in the column, segregated from most hypaxial ones, which were dorsolateral. The only exception to this general rule was the motoneurons innervating the levator costae muscle. Some of the motoneurons innervating this hypaxial muscle were located in the ventral part of the motor column, like epaxial motoneurons, but they were segregated longitudinally from epaxial ones. The arrangement of the motor pools was strikingly similar to the motor pools of presumptive homologous muscles in rats Smith and Hollyday: J. Comp. Neurol. 220:29–43, '83), even though the locomotor mechanics in the two animals are very different. The similarities may reflect a comparable relationship between the location of motoneurons in. The motor column and the location, in embryonic life, of the muscles they innervate. They also suggest that differences in the locomotor mechanics in the two species are accomplished without any dramatic reorganization of the medial motor column, in marked contrast to the substantial reorganization necessary to account for differences in the motor columns of amniotes and anamniotes.