Sacabambaspis

Sacabambaspis
Temporal range: Dapingian-Sandbian, 470–455Ma
Sacabambaspis fossil
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Pteraspidomorphi
Order: †Arandaspidiformes
Family: †Sacabambaspidae
Genus: Sacabambaspis
Gagnier, Blieck & Rodrigo, 1986
Type species
Sacabambaspis janvieri
Gagnier, Blieck & Rodrigo, 1986
Species
  • S. janvieri Gagnier, Blieck & Rodrico, 1986
  • + 3 undescribed species

Sacabambaspis is an extinct genus of jawless fish that lived in the Ordovician period. Sacabambaspis lived in shallow waters on the continental margins of Gondwana.[1] It is the best known arandaspid with many specimens. It is related to Arandaspis.

Description

Reconstruction of Sacabambaspis

Sacabambaspis was 25 cm in length. The body shape of Sacabambaspis vaguely resembled that of a tadpole with an oversized head, flat body, wriggling tail, and lack of fins. It had characteristic, frontally positioned eyes, like car head lamps.[2]

Armor

Sacabambaspis had a head shield made from a large upper (dorsal) plate that rose to a slight ridge in the midline, and a deep curved lower (ventral) plate, this headshield is ornamented with characteristic oak-leaf shaped or tear-drop shaped tubercles.[3][4] Also it had narrow branchial plates which link these two along the sides, and cover the gill area.[3] The eyes were far forward and between them are possibly two small nostrils and they, which are surrounded by what is thought to be endoskeletal bone, and putative nostrils, are found at the extreme anterior of the head, one of the diagnostic features of the arandaspids.[3][4] The rest of body was covered by long, strap-like scales behind the head shield.[3]

Tail

The tail consists of relatively large dorsal and ventral webs and an elongated notochordal lobe, the posterior end of which is bordered by a small fin web. This tail structure clearly differs from that of heterostracans, which are currently grouped with arandaspids and astraspids in the clade Pteraspidomorphi (Gagnier 1993, 1995; Donoghue & Smith 2001; Sansom et al. 2005), in which the caudal fin looks diphycercal (i.e. symmetrical) and strengthened by a few large radials (Janvier 1996).[5]

Discovery and species

Many specimens of Sacabambaspis at Musee d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris

Genus named after the village of Sacabamba, Cochabamba Department, Bolivia, where the first examples were found.

Paleobiology

Life restoration of Sacabambaspis

Feeding

Although it had no jaws, the mouth of Sacabambaspis janvieri was lined with nearly 60 rows of small bony plates (oral plates) which were possibly moveable, which may have allowed expansion and contraction of the pharyngeal cavity, and this could make possible the sucking action of the "vacuum cleaner" more efficient. But there could have been a totally different function for these plates.[7]

Sensory system

The fossils of Sacabambaspis show clear evidence of a sensory structure (lateral line system). This is a line of pores within each of which are open nerve endings that can detect slight movements in the water, produced for example by predators. The arrangement of these organs in regular lines allows the fish to detect the direction and distance from which a disturbance in the water is coming.[4]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "How can something that small appear on TV?". Giles Miller. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  2. Janvier, Philippe (1997) Arandaspida The Tree of Life Web Project.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Benton, Michael J. (2005). Vertebrate Palaeontology 3rd Edition. Blackwell Publishing. p. 47. ISBN 978-1-4051-4449-0.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Taylor & Francis (2001). PE Ahlberg (ed.) Major Events in Early Vertebrate Evolution. Sansom IJ, MM Smith & MP Smith. pp. 156–171.
  5. "The tail of the Ordovician fish Sacabambaspis". Biology Letters. Alan Pradel, Ivan. J Sansom, Pierre-Yves Gagnier, Ricardo Cespedes, and Philippe Janvier. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 "Pteraspidomorphi". After Carroll, 1988, and Janvier, 1997. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 "Australia: The Land Where Time Began". Retrieved 28 October 2013.

External links