Polypterus

Schultze, Hans-Peter, 2018, Hard tissues in fish evolution: history and current issues, Cybium 42 (1), pp. 29-39 : 32

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.26028/cybium/2018-421-003

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/4605E95E-C848-A717-FF00-F99CE5CEFAE5

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Polypterus
status

 

Polypterus View in CoL and elasmodine

Sire (1989) discovered elasmodine in the scales of the extant Polypterus between the dentine and the basal isopedine. He constructed an additional palaeoniscoid type scale, the polypteroid type ganoid scale, with elasmodine lying between dentine and the bony basal plate. Sire et al. (2009: fig. 16) considered the polypteroid-type ganoid scale as the basal osteoichthyan scale type and argued that elasmoid scales are paedomorphic structures in actinopterygians and sarcopterygians.

Polypterus View in CoL is considered the most primitive living actinopterygian, but it is not the most primitive fossil actinopterygian. The genus was placed close to scanilepiforms by Aldinger (1937) and Schultze (1968) on histological grounds (canal system and arrangement of bone cells around the canals, respectively) and by Jakovlev (1973), Selezneva (1985) and Sytchevskaya (1999) on morphological similarities of Evenkia with Polypterus View in CoL . Cloutier and Arratia (2004) cladogram shows Polypterus View in CoL together with Acipenser View in CoL and neopterygians as the sister group of Tarrasius and Guildaichthys, separate from palaeoniscimorphs. A similar placement appears in a new phylogenetic analysis of actinopterygians that includes scanilepiforms ( Giles et al., 2017). The two polypterid genera Polypterus View in CoL and Erpetoichthys View in CoL and the sister group Evenkia are hypothesized to be the most advanced scanilepiforms ( Fig. 1 View Figure 1 ), and the Chinese Middle Triassic Fukangichthys appears as the most basal scanilepiform in this analysis. Scanilepis occurs in the Late Triassic (Rhaetian), the earliest fossil polypterid in the Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian). Thus, there is still a time gap of about 110 million years between the two groups, which is not comparable to a ghost line of about 320 million years if the polypterids are considered to be the most primitive actinopterygians. The youngest palaeoniscimorph with rhomboid palaeoniscoid scales can be found in Pteroniscus from the Late Jurassic, which is not related to scanilepiforms.

The relationship of polypterids as the most advanced scanilepiforms suggests that the histological structure of their scales represents an advanced form of the palaeoniscoid scale type within palaeonisciforms, and the occurrence of elasmodine between dentine and isopedine is an advanced character within palaeonisciforms and not a basal character in actinopterygians or even of osteichthyans as proposed by Sire et al. (2009). Scanilepis shows no indication of elasmodine. Thus, it could be said that the polypterids are another group converging on elasmoid scales within scanilepiforms.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Order

Polypteriformes

Family

Polypteridae

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Chordata

Order

Polypteriformes

Family

Polypteridae

Loc

Polypterus

Schultze, Hans-Peter 2018
2018
Loc

Fukangichthys

Su 1978
1978
Loc

Pteroniscus

Ghekker 1948
1948
Loc

Scanilepis

Aldinger 1937
1937
Loc

Scanilepis

Aldinger 1937
1937
Loc

Tarrasius

Traquair 1881
1881
Loc

Erpetoichthys

Smith 1865
1865
Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF