Chagrinia
Chagrinia Temporal range: | |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Clade: | Sarcopterygii |
Class: | Actinistia |
Genus: | †Chagrinia Schaeffer, 1962 |
Species: | †C. enodis |
Binomial name | |
†Chagrinia enodis Schaeffer, 1962 |
Chagrinia is an extinct genus of prehistoric marine coelacanth which lived during the Late Devonian period.
The holotype, Chagrinia enodis, was found eroded out of the Chagrin Shale in the Euclid Creek Reservation in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1960 by a local citizen.[1][2]
The fossil material is poorly preserved, but the species appears to exhibit a slender body, narrow caudal peduncle, symmetrical tail, and fin rays that outnumber the endochondral supports. The scales appeared to be unornamented, but that may be a preservational artefact.[3]
Some studies have placed it with the Diplocercidae,[4] while others have found it to be more basal.[5]
References
- ^ Schaeffer, Bob (1962). A coelacanth fish from the Upper Devonian of Ohio. Scientific Publications of the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, New Series (Report). Cleveland: Cleveland Museum of Natural History. pp. 1–13.
- ^ Carr, Robert K.; Jackson, Gary L. (2010). "The Vertebrate Fauna of the Cleveland Member (Famennian) of the Ohio Shale". In Hannibal, J.T. (ed.). Guide to the Geology and Paleontology of the Cleveland Member of the Ohio Shale. Ohio Geological Survey Guidebook 22. Cleveland: Ohio Geological Survey. p. 10.
- ^ Forey 1997, pp. 346–347.
- ^ Gess, Robert W.; Coates, Michael I. (2015). "Fossil juvenile coelacanths from the Devonian of South Africa shed light on the order of character acquisition in actinistians: Fossil Coelacanths from the South African Devonian". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 175 (2): 360–383. doi:10.1111/zoj.12276.
- ^ Cloutier, Richard (1996). "Morphology, characters, and the interrelationships of basal sarcopterygians" (PDF). Interrelationships of Fishes.
Bibliography
- Forey, Peter L. (1997). History of the Coelacanth Fishes. London: Kluwer. ISBN 9780412784804.