Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-22dnz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T12:51:12.727Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A new basal actinopterygian fish from the Middle Devonian Aztec Siltstone of Antarctica

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2008

John A. Long*
Affiliation:
Museum Victoria, PO Box 666E, Melbourne, VIC 3001, Australia Research School of Earth Sciences, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia
Brian Choo
Affiliation:
Museum Victoria, PO Box 666E, Melbourne, VIC 3001, Australia Research School of Earth Sciences, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia
Gavin C. Young
Affiliation:
Museum Victoria, PO Box 666E, Melbourne, VIC 3001, Australia Research School of Earth Sciences, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia

Abstract

A new basal actinopterygian fish, Donnrosenia schaefferi gen. et sp. nov., is described from the Middle Devonian (Givetian) Aztec Siltstone of southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. Donnrosenia gen. nov. is characterized by the large parietals which are of almost equivalent size to the frontals, very small intertemporals, a small accessory operculum situated dorsally to the prominent anterodorsal process of the suboperculum, a deep dentary with anterior flexure, porous ornamentation on the clavicle, an elongate body form with macromeric squamation, an absence of paired fringing fulcra on the fins, and pectoral lepidotrichia which are unsegmented for much of their length. A phylogenetic analysis based on dermal skeletal features of Devonian actinopterygians indicates that Donnrosenia gen. nov. is the sister taxon to Howqualepis from the Middle Devonian of Victoria, Australia, and is embedded within a possible clade containing the actinopterygians from the Gogo Formation, Western Australia. This supports the concept of an endemic radiation of East Gondwanan actinopterygians, and reinforces the already strong biogeographical similarities between the Middle Devonian palaeofaunas of Australia and Antarctica.

Type
Earth Sciences
Copyright
Copyright © Antarctic Science Ltd 2008

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Arratia, G. & Cloutier, R. 1996. Reassessment of the morphology of Cheirolepis canadensis (Actinopterygii). In Schultze, H.P. & Cloutier, R., eds. Devonian fishes and plants of Miguasha, Quebec, Canada. München: Dr Friedrich Pfeil, 166197.Google Scholar
Arratia, G. & Cloutier, R. 2004. A new cheirolepidid fish from the Middle–Upper Devonian of Red Hill, Nevada, USA. In Arratia, G., Wilson, M.V.H. & Cloutier, R., eds. Recent advances in the origin and early radiation of vertebrates. München: Dr Friedrich Pfeil, 583598.Google Scholar
Basden, A. & Young, G.C. 2001. A primitive actinopterygian neurocranium from the Early Devonian Taemas Formation, Burrinjuck area, New South Wales, Australia. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 21, 754766.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Basden, A., Young, G.C., Coates, M. & Ritchie, A. 2000. The most primitive osteichthyan braincase? Nature, 403, 186188.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Burrow, C.J. 1995. A new palaeoniscoid from the Lower Devonian Trundle beds of Australia. Geobios Memoire Special, 19, 319325.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Campbell, K.S.W. & Barwick, R.E. 1986. Paleozoic lungfishes - a review. Journal of Morphology, Sup. 1, 93131.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Casier, E. 1952. Contributions a l'etude des poissons fossiles de la Belgique. Bulletin de l'Institut royal des Sciences naturelles de Belgique, 28(47), 17 pp.Google Scholar
Casier, E. 1954. Contributions a l'etude des poissons fossiles de la Belgique. XI. Note additionnelle relative a “Stereolepis” (= Osorioichthys nov. nom) et a l'origine de l'interoperculaire. Bulletin de l'Institut royal des Sciences naturelles de Belgique, 30(2), 12 pp.Google Scholar
Cloutier, R. & Arratia, G. 2004. Early diversification of Actinopterygii. In Arratia, G., Wilson, M.V.H. & Cloutier, R., eds. Recent advances in the origin and early radiation of vertebrates. München: Dr Friedrich Pfeil, 217270.Google Scholar
Daeschler, E. 2000. An early actinopterygian fish from the Catskill Formation (Late Devonian, Famennian) in Pennsylvania, USA. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 150, 181192.Google Scholar
Dunkle, D. & Schaeffer, B. 1973. Tegeolepis clarki (Newberry), a palaeonisciform from the Upper Devonian Ohio Shale. Palaeontographica Abteilung A, 143, 141158.Google Scholar
Esin, D.N. 1990. The scale cover of Amblypterus costata (Eichwald) and the palaeoniscid taxonomy based on isolated scales. Paleontological Journal, 2, 9098.Google Scholar
Friedman, M. & Blom, H. 2006. A new actinopterygians from the Famennian of East Greenland and the interrelationships of Devonian ray-finned fishes. Journal of Paleontology, 80, 11861204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gardiner, B.G. 1963. Certain palaeoniscoid fishes and the evolution of the snout in actinopterygians. Bulletin of the British Museum of Natural History (Geology), 8, 258325.Google Scholar
Gardiner, B.G. 1984. The relationships of the palaeoniscoid fishes, a review based on new specimens of Mimia and Moythomasia from the Upper Devonian of Western Australia. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History) Geology, 37, 1428.Google Scholar
Gardiner, B.G. 1993. Osteichthyes: basal actinopterygians. In Benton, M.J., ed. The Fossil Record 2. London, Chapman & Hall, 611619.Google Scholar
Gardiner, B.G. & Bartram, A.W.H. 1977. The homologies of ventral cranial fissures in osteichthyans. In Andrews, S.M., Miles, R.S. & Walker, A.D., eds. Problems in vertebrate evolution. London: Academic Press, 227245.Google Scholar
Gardiner, B.G. & Schaeffer, B. 1989. Interrelationships of lower actinopterygian fishes. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 97, 135187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gardiner, B.G., Schaeffer, B. & Masserie, J.A. 2005. A review of the lower actinopterygian phylogeny. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 144, 511525.Google Scholar
Grande, L. & Eastman, J.T. 1986. A review of the Antarctic ichthyofauna in the light of new fossil discoveries. Palaeontology, 29, 113137.Google Scholar
Gross, W. 1950. Umbenennung von Aldingeria Gross (Palaeoniscidae; Oberdevon) in Moythomasia n.nom. Neues Jahrbuch für Mineralogie, Geologie, und Paläontologie, Monatschefte, 1950, 145.Google Scholar
Hampe, O. & Long, J.A. 1999. The histology of Middle Devonian chondrichthyan teeth from southern Victoria land, Antarctica. Records of the Western Australian Museum, Sup. 57, 2336.Google Scholar
Huxley, T.H. 1880. On the applications of the laws of evolution to the arrangement of the Vertebrata and more particularly of the Mammalia. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 1880, 649662.Google Scholar
Jessen, H. 1968. Moythomasia nitida Gross und M. cf. striata Gross, Devonische palaeonisciden aus dem oberen Plattenkalk der Bergish-Gladbach-Paffrather Mulde (Rheinisches Schiefergebirge). Palaeontographica Abteilung A, 128, 87114.Google Scholar
Johanson, Z. 2004. Late Devonian sarcopterygian fishes from eastern Gondwana (Australia and Antarctica) and their importance in phylogeny and biogeography. In Arratia, G., Wilson, M.V.H. & Cloutier, R., eds. Recent advances in the origin and early radiation of vertebrates. München: Dr Friedrich Pfeil, 287308.Google Scholar
Johanson, Z. & Ahlberg, P.E. 2001. Devonian rhizodontids (Sarcopterygii; tetrapodomorpha) from east Gondwana. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Earth Sciences, 92, 4374.Google Scholar
Long, J.A. 1983. A diplacanthoid acanthodian from the Late Devonian of Victoria. Memoir of the Association of Australasian Palaeontologists, 1, 5165.Google Scholar
Long, J.A. 1988. New palaeoniscoid fishes from the Late Devonian and Early Carboniferous of Victoria. Memoirs of the Association of Australian Palaeontologists, 7, 164.Google Scholar
Long, J.A. 1992. Cranial anatomy of two new Late Devonian lungfishes (Pisces: Dipnoi) from Mount Howitt, Victoria. Records of the Australian Museum, 44, 299318.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Long, J.A. 1995. A new groenlandaspidid arthrodire (Pisces: Placodermi) from the Middle Devonian Aztec Siltstone, southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. Records of the Western Australian Museum, 17, 3541.Google Scholar
Long, J.A. 1999. A genus of fossil coelacanth (Osteichthyes: Coelacanthiformes) from the Middle Devonian of southeastern Australia. Records of the Western Australian Museum, Sup. 57, 3753.Google Scholar
Long, J.A. 2003. Palaeontology (Middle Devonian to Carboniferous). In Birch, W.D., ed. Geology of Victoria. Geological Society of Australia, Special Publication, No. 23, 190192.Google Scholar
Long, J.A. & Young, G.C. 1995. New sharks from the Middle–Late Devonian Aztec Siltstone, southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. Records of the Western Australian Museum, 17, 287308.Google Scholar
McPherson, J.G. 1975. Footprints on a Frozen Continent. Wellington: Hicks Smith & Sons, 152 pp.Google Scholar
McPherson, J.G. 1978. Stratigraphy and sedimentology of the Upper Devonian Aztec Siltstone, southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. New Zealand Journal of Geology & Geophysics, 21, 667683.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nelson, G. & Rosen, D.E., eds. 1980. Vicariance biogeography: a critique. New York: Columbia University Press, 218 pp.Google Scholar
Nelson, J.S. 2006. Fishes of the World, 4th ed.London: Wiley and Sons, 624 pp.Google Scholar
Newberry, J.S. 1888. On the fossil fishes of the Erie Shale of Ohio. Transactions of the New York Academy of Sciences, 7, 178180.Google Scholar
Pearson, D.M. & Westoll, T.S. 1979. The Devonian actinopterygian Cheirolepis Agassiz. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 70, 337399.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prokofiev, A.M. 2002. First finding of an articulated actinopterygian skeleton from the Upper Devonian of Siberia and a reappraisal of the family Moythomasiidae Kazantseva, 1971 (Osteichthyes). Paleontological Research, 6, 321327.Google Scholar
Ritchie, A. 1975. Groenlandaspis in Europe, Australia and Antarctica. Nature, 254, 569573.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rosen, D.E. 1974. Phylogeny and zoogeography of salmoniform fishes. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 153, 265326.Google Scholar
Schaeffer, B. 1972. A Jurassic fish from Antarctica. American Museum Novitates, 2495, 117.Google Scholar
Schultze, H.-P. 1968. Palaeoniscoidea-Schuppen aus dem Unterdevon Australiens und Kanadas und aus dem Mitteldevon Spitzbergens. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History), Geology, 16, 342368.Google Scholar
Schultze, H.-P. 1992. Early Devonian actinopterygians (Osteichthyes, Pisces) from Siberia. In Mark-Kurik, E., ed. Fossil fishes as living animals. Tallinn: Institute of Geology, 233242.Google Scholar
Schultze, H.-P. & Cumbaa, S.L. 2001. Dialipina and the characters of basal actinopterygians. In Ahlberg, P.E., ed. Major events in early vertebrate evolution. Systematics Association Special Volume, 61. London: Taylor & Francis, 315332.Google Scholar
Taverne, L. 1997. Osorioichthys marginis, “Palaeonisciforme” du famennien de Belgique, et la phylogenie de Actinopterygians devonians (Pisces). Bulletin de l'Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique, 67, 5778.Google Scholar
Trinajstic, K. 1999. Scale morphology of the Late Devonian palaeoniscoid Moythomasia durgaringa Gardiner and Bartram, 1997. Alcheringa, 23, 919.Google Scholar
Turner, S. 1997. Sequence of Devonian thelodont scale assemblages in East Gondwana. Geological Society of America, Special Publication, 321, 295315.Google Scholar
Turner, S. & Young, G.C. 1992. Thelodont scales from the Middle–Late Devonian Aztec Siltstone, southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. Antarctic Science, 4, 89105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, E.I. 1968. Devonian fishes of the Mawson–Mulock area, Victoria Land, Antarctica, Trans-Antarctic Expedition 1955–1958. Scientific Reports, Geology, 16, 126.Google Scholar
Woodward, A.S. 1891. Catalogue of the fossil fishes in the British Museum (Natural History), Part II. London: British Museum, 567 pp, 15 pl.Google Scholar
Woodward, A.S. 1921. Fish remains from the Upper Old Red Sandstone of Granite Harbour, Antarctica. British Antarctic (Terra Nova) Expedition, 1910. Natural History Report (Geology), 1, 5162.Google Scholar
Woodward, A.S. & White, E. 1926. The fossil fishes of the Old Red Sandstone of the Shetland Islands. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Earth Sciences, 54, 567571.Google Scholar
Woolfe, K.J., Long, J.A., Bradshaw, M., Harmsen, F. & Kirkbride, M. 1990. Discovery of fish-bearing Aztec Siltstone (Devonian) in the Cook Mountains, Antarctica. New Zealand Journal of Geology & Geophysics, 33, 511514.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Young, G.C. 1982. Devonian sharks from south-eastern Australia and Antarctica. Palaeontology, 25, 817843.Google Scholar
Young, G.C. 1987. Devonian vertebrates of Gondwana. In McKenzie, G.D., ed. Gondwana Six: stratigraphy, sedimentology, and paleontology. American Geophysical Union, Geophysical Monograph, 41, 4150.Google Scholar
Young, G.C. 1988. Antiarchs (placoderm fishes) from the Devonian Aztec Siltstone, southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. Palaeontographica, 202A, 1125.Google Scholar
Young, G.C. 1989a. The Aztec fish fauna of southern Victoria Land - evolutionary and biogeographic significance. In Crame, J.A., ed. Origins and evolution of the Antarctic biota. Geological Survey of London Special Publication, No. 47, 4362.Google Scholar
Young, G.C. 1989b. New occurrences of culmacanthid acanthodians (Pisces, Devonian) from Antarctica and southeastern Australia. Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales, 111, 1225.Google Scholar
Young, G.C. 1991. Fossil fishes from Antarctica. In Tingey, R.J., ed. The geology of Antarctica. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 538567.Google Scholar
Young, G.C. 1993. Middle Palaeozoic macrovertebrate biostratigraphy of eastern Gondwana. In Long, J.A., ed. Palaeozoic vertebrate biostratigraphy and biogeography. London: Belhaven Press, 208251.Google Scholar
Young, G.C. 1996. Devonian (chart 4). In Young, G.C. & Laurie, J.R., eds. An Australian Phanerozoic timescale. Melbourne: Oxford University Press, 96109.Google Scholar
Young, G.C. 1999. Preliminary report on the biostratigraphy of new placoderm discoveries in the Hervey Group (Upper Devonian) of central New South Wales. Records of the Western Australian Museum, Sup. 57, 139150.Google Scholar
Young, G.C. 2007. Devonian formations, vertebrate faunas and age control on the far south coast of New South Wales and adjacent Victoria. Australian Journal of Earth Sciences, 54, 9911008.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Young, G.C. & Burrow, C. 2004. Diplacanthid acanthodians from the Aztec Siltstone (late Middle Devonian) of southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. Fossils & Strata, 50, 2343.Google Scholar
Young, G.C. & Long, J.A. 2005. Phyllolepid placoderm fish remains from the Devonian Aztec Siltstone, southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. Antarctic Science, 17, 387408.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Young, G.C., Long, J.A. & Ritchie, A. 1992. Crossopterygian fishes from the Devonian of Antarctica: systematics, relationships and biogeographic significance. Records of the Australian Museum Supplement, 14, 177.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Young, G.C. & Turner, S. 2000. Devonian microvertebrates and marine-nonmarine correlation in East Germany: overview. Courier Forschungsinstitut Senckenberg, 223, 453470.Google Scholar