Marsdenichthys

Marsdenichthys
Temporal range: Late Devonian
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Class: Sarcopterygii
Infraclass: Tetrapodomorpha
Genus: Marsdenichthys
Long, 1985
Species
  • M. longioccipitus Long, 1985 (type)

Marsdenichthys is an extinct genus of Devonian tetrapodomorph. Fossils have been found from Mount Howitt in Victoria, Australia from strata that are Givetian-Frasnian in age.[1] Mount Howitt is an important site that has been the source of many tetrapodomorph fossils, including Beelarongia and Howittichthys, both of which were first described from the locality.[2][3]

Marsdenichthys was first named in 1985 on the basis of material collected from Mount Howitt. The genus was initially described as a member of the family Eusthenopteridae (now known as the Tristichopteridae), the first known from the southern hemisphere.[4] However, the classification of Marsdenichthys within Tetrapodomorpha has often been debated and there is not yet a consensus on the exact phylogenetic relationships of the genus.[1]

Classification

When it was originally described as a tristichopterid by Long (1985), Marsdenichthys was considered to be the basalmost member of the family, based on such characters as the presence of extratemporal bones, the size ratio between the parietals and postparietals, and the presence of rounded scales with an internal median boss.[4] At the time, this feature was thought to be unique to tristichopterids, but Long suggested that Marsdenichthys could be considered a specialized "osteolepidid" if the scale morphology was later found to be present in members of the family. Osteolepididae is now known to be paraphyletic along with the superorder Osteolepiformes,[5] but several "non-tristichopterid osteolepiformes" have since been found with the scale morphology previously seen only in Marsdenichthys. These include the genera Medoevia, Canowindra, and Rhizodopsis.[1]

Based on scale ornamentation, Marsdenichthys was assigned to the family Rhizodopsidae by Long (1999).[6] However, the only phylogenetic analyses that included Marsdenichthys either placed it with Eusthenopteron in a clade within a monophyletic Osteolepiformes,[7] a polytomy with Eusthenopteron basal to Megalichthys,[8] or a polytomy basal to Medoevia and Gogonasus.[9] It is possible that the classification of Marsdenichthys remains unresolved because there is a lack of derived characters in the incomplete Mount Howitt specimens. However, Holland et al. (2010) recently described new specimens from Mount Howitt that preserve previously unknown derived characters, mainly in the cheek and palate.[1] However, because Holland et al. (2010) did not provide a phylogenetic analysis using the new specimens, the classification of Marsdenichthys remains unresolved.

References

  1. ^ a b c d Holland, T.; Long, J.; and Snitting, D. (2010). "New information on the enigmatic tetrapodomorph fish Marsdenichthys longioccipitus (Long, 1985)". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 30 (1): 68–77. doi:10.1080/02724630903409105. 
  2. ^ Long, J. A. (1987). "An unusual osteolepiform fish from the Late Devonian of Victoria, Australia". Palaeontology 30: 839–852. 
  3. ^ Long, J. A.; and Holland, T. (2008). "A possible elpistostegalid from the Devonian of Gondwana". Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria 120: 182–192. 
  4. ^ a b Long, J. (1985). "The structure and relationships of a new osteolepiform fish from the Late Devonian of Victoria, Australia". Alcheringa 9: 1–22. doi:10.1080/03115518508618955. 
  5. ^ Ahlberg, P. E.; and Johanson, Z. (1998). "Osteolepiforms and the ancestry of tetrapods". Nature 395 (6704): 792–794. Bibcode 1998Natur.395..792A. doi:10.1038/27421. 
  6. ^ Long, J. A. (1999). "A new genus of fossil coelacanth (Osteichthyes: Coelacanthiformes) from the Middle Devonian of southeastern Australia". Records of the Western Australian Museum Supplement 57: 37–53. 
  7. ^ Cloutier, R.; and Ahlberg, P. E. (1995). "Sarcopterygian interrelationships: How far are we from a phylogenetic consensus?". Geobios 19: 241–248. 
  8. ^ Long, J. A.; Young, G. C.; Holland, T.; Senden, T. J.; and Fitzgerald, E. M. G. (2006). "An exceptional Devonian fish from Australia sheds light on tetrapod origins". Nature 444 (7116): 199–202. doi:10.1038/nature05243. PMID 17051154. 
  9. ^ Holland, T.; and Long, J. A. (2009). "On the phylogenetic position of Gogonasus andrewsae Long 1985, within the Tetrapodomorpha". Acta Zoologica 90 (Supplement 1): 285–296. doi:10.1111/j.1463-6395.2008.00377.x.