Arandaspida

Arandaspida is a taxon of very early, jawless prehistoric fish which lived during the Ordovician period. Arandaspids represent the oldest known craniates, a proposed group of chordates that contain all chordates with a cartilage-derived skull (i.e., lampreys, armored agnathans, and gnathostomes), and hagfish. The group represents a subclass within the class Pteraspidomorphi, and contains only one order, the Arandaspidiformes. The oldest known genus of this group is Sacabambaspis found in South America.

Arandaspida
Temporal range: Early OrdovicianLate Ordovician, 480–455 Ma
Life restoration of Arandaspis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Superclass: Agnatha
Class: Pteraspidomorphi
Subclass: Arandaspida
Ritchie and Gilbert-Tomlinson, 1977
Families
Sacabambaspis, the best known arandaspid, from the Ordovician of Bolivia. shows the characteristic, frontally positioned eyes, like car head lamps[1]

Characteristics

The head armor of arandaspids is elongated, fusiform, with a rather flat dorsal shield, and a bulging ventral shield. In the anterior part of the dorsal shield are two closely set holes, which have been thought to be a paired pineal opening, but which are more likely the external openings of the endolymphatic ducts.

The eyes, surrounded by a sclerotic ring, are housed in a notch at the anterior end of the dorsal shield. The nostrils are not clearly located, but may have been situated between the eyes. Ventrally, the ventral lip of the mouth is armed with long series of small oral plates which recall those of heterostracans.

The gill openings are probably numerous (more than 15) and minute. They opened between the diamond-shaped platelets which separate the dorsal from the ventral shield.

The body is covered with rod-shaped scales arranged in chevrons, and the tail is probably pad-shaped and diphycercal. The dermal bones of arandaspids consist of aspidine (acellular bone) and are ornamented with oakleaf-shaped tubercles which seem to contain no dentine. The sensory-lines were housed in narrow grooves between the tubercles.

Taxonomy

Taxonomy based on the work of Mikko's Phylogeny Archive,[2] Nelson, Grande and Wilson 2016[3] and van der Laan 2018.[4]

  • OrderArandaspidiformes Ritchie & Gilbert-Tomlinson, 1977
    • FamilyAseraspididae Halstead 1993
      • Genus †Aseraspis Dineley & Loeffler 1976
    • FamilyArandaspididae Ritchie & Gilbert-Tomlinson, 1977 [Porophoraspididae Halstead 1993; Sacabambaspidae]
      • Genus †Andinaspis Gagnier, 1991 non Ritchie & Gilbert-Tomlinson, 1977
      • Genus †Apedolepis Young, 1997
      • Genus †Arandaspis Ritchie & Gilbert-Tomlinson, 1977
      • Genus †Areyongalepis Young, 2000
      • Genus †Pircanchaspis Erdtmann et al., 2000
      • Genus †Porophoraspis Ritchie & Gilbert-Tomlinson, 1977
      • Genus †Ritchieichthys Sansom et al., 2013
      • Genus †Sacabambaspis Gagnier, Blieck & Rodrico, 1986

See also

References

  1. Janvier, Philippe (1997) Arandaspida The Tree of Life Web Project.
  2. Haaramo, Mikko (2003). "Pteraspidomorphi". in Mikko's Phylogeny Archive. After Carroll, 1988, and Janvier, 1997. Retrieved 26 October 2013.
  3. Nelson, Joseph S.; Grande, Terry C.; Wilson, Mark V. H. (2016). Fishes of the World (5th ed.). John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9781118342336.
  4. van der Laan, Richard (2017). "Family-group names of fossil fishes". Cite journal requires |journal= (help)


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.