Biology:Aetheretmon

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Short description: Extinct genus of fishes


Aetheretmon
Temporal range: early Mississippian
Aetheretmon valentiacum fossil
Scientific classification edit
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Animalia
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Chordata
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Actinopterygii
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Strepheoschemidae
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: Aetheretmon
White, 1927
Script error: No such module "Taxobox ranks".: <div style="display:inline" class="script error: no such module "taxobox ranks".">†A. valentiacum
Binomial name
Aetheretmon valentiacum
White, 1927
Synonyms

Aetherthmon White, 1927

Aetheretmon is an extinct genus of prehistoric freshwater and estuarine ray-finned fish that lived during the early Mississippian (Dinantian) age in what is now Europe, including Scotland, Belarus , and Russia .[1] It contains only the species A. valentiacum.[2] This genus has the oldest known actinopterygian growth series, indicating that juvenile Aetheretmon had tails similar to those of modern teleosts, but unlike teleosts, their upper tails continued to grow throughout their lives instead of truncating early.[3][4] Initially classified as a "palaeoniscid", later studies have recovered it as a stem-neopterygian, or more recently a stem-actinopteran.[2][3]

See also

  • Prehistoric fish
  • List of prehistoric bony fish

References

  1. "PBDB". https://paleobiodb.org/classic/basicTaxonInfo?taxon_no=34967. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 Gardiner, Brian G. (1985). "Actinopterygian fish from the Dinantian of Foulden, Berwickshire, Scotland". Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh: Earth Sciences 76: 61-67. doi:10.1017/S0263593300010312. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 Sallan, Lauren (2016). "Fish ‘tails’ result from outgrowth and reduction of two separate ancestral tails". Current Biology 26 (23): R1224–R1225. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2016.10.036. ISSN 0960-9822. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2016.10.036. 
  4. "Fish fossils reveal how tails evolved, Penn professor finds" (in en). https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/708263. 

Wikidata ☰ Q4688681 entry