
thumb|right|upright|Fish fillet|Filet of [[salmon showing the zig-zagging pattern of its myomeres. The white fascia divides each myomere from its neighbors]] Myomeres are blocks of skeletal muscle tissue arranged in sequence, commonly found in aquatic chordates. Myomeres are separated from adjacent myomeres by fascia consisting of connective tissue, known as myosepta. Myomere counts are sometimes used for identifying specimens using meristics, since their number corresponds to the number of vertebrae in the adults. Myomere location varies, with some species containing these only near the tails
thumb|right|upright|Fish fillet|Filet of [[salmon showing the zig-zagging pattern of its myomeres. The white fascia divides each myomere from its neighbors]] Myomeres are blocks of skeletal muscle tissue arranged in sequence, commonly found in aquatic chordates. Myomeres are separated from adjacent myomeres by fascia consisting of connective tissue, known as myosepta. Myomere counts are sometimes used for identifying specimens using meristics, since their number corresponds to the number of vertebrae in the adults. Myomere location varies, with some species containing these only near the tails, while some have them located near the scapular or pelvic girdles. Depending on the species, myomeres could be arranged in an epaxial or hypaxial manner; hypaxial refers to ventral muscles (those of the "stomach" region) and related structures, while epaxial refers to more dorsal muscles (those of the "back"). The horizontal septum divides these two regions in vertebrates from cyclostomes (jawless lamprey and hagfish) to gnathostomes (jawed fish). In terrestrial chordates, which are gnathostomes themselves, the myomeres become fused as well as indistinct, due to the disappearance of myosepta.
== Form == thumb|left|Fillet of iridescent shark showing the zig-zag of myomeres Myomeres are overlapping "cones" of muscle fibers bound by connective tissue. The shape of myomeres varies by species. Myomeres are commonly zig-zaged, being stacks or lines of muscle fibers shaped like "V" (lancelets), "W" (fishes), or straight (tetrapods). Generally, cyclostome myomeres are arranged in vertical strips while those of jawed fishes are folded in a complex manner due to their derived nature and evolution of advanced swimming capability. Specifically, myomeres of elasmobranchs and eels are W-shaped, while the myomeres of tetrapods, such as mudpuppies, run vertically and do not display complex folding. Myomeres overlap each other in succession, meaning myomere activation also allows neighboring myomeres to activate. They are innervated by spinal nerves, which pass into each myomere.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).