Enchodus
Enchodus | |
---|---|
Enchodus petrosus mounted skeleton cast in the Rocky Mountain Dinosaur Resource Center in Woodland Park, Colorado | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Actinopterygii |
Order: | Aulopiformes |
Family: | †Enchodontidae |
Genus: | †Enchodus Agassiz, 1835 |
Type species | |
†Esox lewesiensis Mantell, 1822
| |
Species | |
~26+, see text |
Enchodus (from Greek: ἔγχος enchos, 'spear' and Greek: ὀδούς odoús 'tooth')[1] is an extinct genus of aulopiform ray-finned fish related to lancetfish and lizardfish. Species of Enchodus flourished during the Late Cretaceous, where they were a widespread component of marine ecosystems worldwide, and there is some evidence that they may have survived to the Paleocene or Eocene; however, this may just represent reworked Cretaceous material.[2][3][4]
Taxonomy
[edit]Species of Enchodus are generally classified into two different clades, the North American and the Mediterranean. It has been proposed that this distinction is the result of several isolated events between the two populations over the Late Cretaceous.[5] The earliest known species is E. zimapanensis from the late Albian or earliest Cenomanian of Mexico.[6] Potentially earlier remains are known from the late Barremian/early Aptian of Brazil (Morro de Chaves Formation), but these specimens are too fragmentary to confidently assign to this genus.[7][8]
Species
[edit]Enchodus was a diverse, long-lived genus with many species known throughout its temporal and geographic range. The following valid species are known:[7][9][10][11]
- E. amicrodus
- E. annectens Woodward 1901
- E. brevis Chalifa, 1989 - Cenomanian of the West Bank, Palestine (Amminadav Formation), potentially Lebanon (Sannine Formation)
- E. bursauxi (Arambourg, 1952) - Coniacian of Angola (Itombe Formation), Late Campanian of Egypt, Maastrichtian to potentially Danian of Morocco (Ouled Abdoun Basin)
- E. dentex (Heckel, 1856) - Cenomanian of Slovenia (Komen Limestone)
- E. dirus (Leidy, 1857) - Maastrichtian of the United States (Fox Hills Formation of North Dakota, Severn Formation of Maryland), potentially Gavdos, Greece[12]
- E. elegans Dartevelle & Casier 1949 - Coniacian of Angola (Itombe Formation), Maastrichtian of Brazil (Gramame Formation), Niger, Syria, and Jordan (Alhisa Phosphorite Formation); Maastrichtian to potentially Danian of Morocco (Ouled Abdoun Basin)
- E. faujasi Agassiz, 1843 - Coniacian of Angola (Itombe Formation), Campanian of Israel (Mishash Formation), Maastrichtian of France (Calcarintes du Jadet Formation), Maastrichtian/potentially Danian of the Netherlands (Maastricht Formation)[13]
- E. ferox Leidy, 1855 - Santonian of Orenburg, Russia; Campanian to Maastrichtian (potentially Paleocene) of the United States (Marshalltown, Mount Laurel, Navesink, and Hornerstown Formations of New Jersey, Marshalltown Formation of Delaware, Severn Formation of Maryland, Arkansas, Fox Hills Formation of North Dakota); Maastrichtian of Argentina (Jagüel Formation) and India (Intertrappean Beds)
- E. gladiolus (Cope, 1872) - Cenomanian to Maastrichtian of the United States (Greenhorn Limestone of Colorado, Kansas & Iowa, Graneros Shale & Carlile Shale of Nebraska, Mancos Shale of New Mexico, Carlile Shale of Kansas, Arkansas, and Merchantville, Navesink & Hornerstown Formations of New Jersey), Santonian to Campanian of Russia (Orenburg, Rybushka Formation), Maastrichtian of Argentina (Jagüel Formation), potentially Peru (Vivian Formation)[14]
- E. gracilis (von der Marck, 1858) - Campanian of Germany (Ahlen Formation)
- E. lamberti Arambourg & Joleaud 1943
- E. lemonnieri Dello 1893
- E. lewesiensis (Mantell, 1822) (type species) - Cenomanian to Coniacian of England (English Chalk, Seaford Formation), potentially Maastrichtian of Germany (Gerhardsreit Formation)
- E. libycus (Quaas, 1902) - Cenomanian to Maastrichtian of Brazil (Cotinguiba Formation, Gramame Formation), Campanian of Egypt, Maastrichtian to potentially Danian of Morocco (Ouled Abdoun Basin)[15]
- E. longidens (Pictet, 1850) - Santonian of Lebanon (Sahel Alma), potentially Paleocene/early Eocene of India (Akli Formation)[3]
- E. longipectoralis (Schaeffer, 1947) - Cenomanian to Coniacian of Brazil (Cotinguiba Formation)
- E. lycodon Kner, 1867 - Cenomanian of Slovenia (Komen Limestone)
- E. macropterus (von der Marck, 1863) - Campanian of Germany (Baumberge Formation)
- E. major Davis, 1887 - Santonian of Lebanon (Sahel Alma)
- E. marchesettii (Kramberger, 1895) - Cenomanian of Lebanon (Sannine Formation)
- E. mecoanalis Forey et al., 2003 - Cenomanian of Lebanon (Sannine Formation)
- E. oliveirai Maury, 1930 - Cenomanian to Maastrichtian of Brazil (Cotinguiba & Gramame Formations)
- E. parvus [citation needed]
- E. petrosus Cope, 1874 - Cenomanian to late Campanian/early Maastrichtian of the United States (Tokio Formation of Arkansas, Carlile Shale of Kansas, Niobrara Formation of South Dakota, Mooreville & Demopolis Chalk of Alabama, Blufftown Formation of Georgia, Tar Heel Formation of North Carolina, Donoho Creek Formation of South Carolina, Navesink Formation of New Jersey), Turonian of Canada (Northwest Territories), Santonian to Campanian of Russia (Orenburg & Rybushka Formation)
- E. pulchellus Woodward 1901
- E. saevus Hay 1903
- E. semistriatus Marsh 1869
- E. shumardi Leidy, 1856 - Cenomanian to Santonian of the United States (Greenhorn Limestone of Iowa, Kansas & Colorado, Carlile & Graneros Shale of Nebraska & Kansas, Niobrara Formation of Kansas & South Dakota) and Canada (Ashville Formation of Saskatchewan, Kaskapau Formation of Alberta)
- E. subaequilateralis Cope, 1885 - Maastrichtian of Brazil (Gramame Formation)
- E. tineidae Holloway et al., 2017 - Campanian of Egypt (Duwi Formation)[5]
- E. venator Arambourg, 1954 - Cenomanian of Morocco (Jbel Tselfat) and Italy (Scaglia Variegata Alpina Formation)
- E. zinensis Chalifa, 1996 - Campanian/Maastrichtian of Egypt
- E. zimapanensis Fielitz & González-Rodríguez, 2010 - Late Albian/Cenomanian of Mexico (El Doctor Formation)[6]
Many other dubious species based on insufficient remains have been described throughout its range. Even most of the valid Enchodus species are based on only isolated teeth and bones.[7] The genus Parenchodus, considered to be the sister genus of Enchodus, has been synonymized with this genus based on some studies.[7] However, more recent studies have found it to be a valid genus distinct from Enchodus.[5][12]
Phylogeny
[edit]Enchodus[5] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Phylogeny of the genus with some species |
Description
[edit]Enchodus species were small to medium in size, large species (E. zinensis) reached 172.2 centimetres (67.8 in).[16] One of the genus' most notable attributes are the large "fangs" at the front of the upper and lower jaws and on the palatine bones, leading to its misleading nickname among fossil hunters and paleoichthyologists, "the saber-toothed herring". These fangs, along with a long sleek body and large eyes, suggest Enchodus was a predatory species.[17]
E. petrosus, with standard length around 76.7 centimetres (30.2 in)[16] and sometimes over 1 metre (3 ft 3 in),[18] remains of which are common from the Niobrara Chalk, the Mooreville Chalk Formation, the Pierre Shale, and other geological formations deposited within the Western Interior Seaway and the Mississippi Embayment. Large individuals of this species had fangs measuring over 6 centimetres (2.4 in) in length, giving its skull an appearance somewhat reminiscent of modern deep-sea fishes, such as anglerfish and viperfish. Other species were considerably smaller, some like E. parvus were only some centimeters (a few inches) long.[19]
Despite being a formidable predator, remains of Enchodus are commonly found among the stomach contents of larger predators, including sharks, other bony fish, mosasaurs, plesiosaurs and seabirds such as Baptornis advenus.[citation needed]
Distribution
[edit]Enchodus fossils have been found all over the world. In North America, Enchodus remains have been recovered from most US states with fossiliferous Late Cretaceous rocks, including Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia, Tennessee, Wyoming, Texas, California, North Carolina, and New Jersey. Fossils also have been found in the Aguja and El Doctor Formations of Mexico and the Ashville, Vermillion River and Dinosaur Park Formations, and Brown Bed Member of Canada. The taxon is also known from coeval strata in Africa, the Middle East, Europe, southwest Asia and the Tiupampan Santa Lucía Formation and Maastrichtian El Molino Formation of Bolivia and the Paraíba, Pernambuco and Sergipe states of Brazil.[20] Potentially the latest Enchodus remains are known from the earliest Eocene of Barmer, India.[3] However, it has also been suggested that all post-Cretaceous Enchodus records are just reworked material.[4]
Gallery
[edit]-
Restoration of E. petrosus
-
E. lewesiensis skull
-
Teeth of E. elegans from Khouribga
-
Teeth of E. libyus from Khouribga
References
[edit]- ^ Roberts, George (1839). An etymological and explanatory dictionary of the terms and language of geology. London: Longman, Orme, Brown, Green, & Longmans. p. 55. Retrieved 30 December 2021.
- ^ Fielitz, Christopher; González-Rodríguez, Katia A. (2010). "A New Species of Enchodus (aulopiformes: Enchodontidae) from the Cretaceous (albian to Cenomanian) of Zimapán, Hidalgo, México". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 30 (5): 1343–1351. Bibcode:2010JVPal..30.1343F. doi:10.1080/02724634.2010.501438. JSTOR 40864352. S2CID 84281080.
- ^ a b c Rana, R. S.; Kumar, K.; Singh, H.; Rose, K. D. (2005). "Lower vertebrates from the Late Palaeocene–Earliest Eocene Akli Formation, Giral Lignite Mine, Barmer District, western India". Current Science. 89 (9): 1606–1613. JSTOR 24110948.
- ^ a b Davis, Matthew P.; Fielitz, Christopher (December 2010). "Estimating divergence times of lizardfishes and their allies (Euteleostei: Aulopiformes) and the timing of deep-sea adaptations". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 57 (3): 1194–1208. Bibcode:2010MolPE..57.1194D. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2010.09.003. PMID 20854916.
- ^ a b c d Waymon L. Holloway; Kerin M. Claeson; Hesham M. Sallam; Sanaa El-Sayed; Mahmoud Kora; Joseph J.W. Sertich; Patrick M. O’Connor (2017). "A new species of the neopterygian fish Enchodus from the Duwi Formation, Campanian, Late Cretaceous, Western Desert, central Egypt". Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 62 (3): 603–611. doi:10.4202/app.00331.2016.
- ^ a b Fielitz, Christopher; GonzáLez-RodríGuez, Katia A. (2010). "A new species of Enchodus (Aulopiformes: Enchodontidae) from the Cretaceous (Albian to Cenomanian) of Zimapán, Hidalgo, México". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 30 (5): 1343–1351. Bibcode:2010JVPal..30.1343F. doi:10.1080/02724634.2010.501438. ISSN 0272-4634.
- ^ a b c d Silva, Hilda M. A.; Gallo, Valéria (2011). "Taxonomic review and phylogenetic analysis of Enchodontoidei (Teleostei: Aulopiformes)". Anais da Academia Brasileira de Ciências. 83: 483–511. doi:10.1590/S0001-37652011000200010. ISSN 0001-3765.
- ^ Universitaria~vertebrata.j@gmail.com, Jesús Alberto Díaz-Cruz~Ciudad; México~alvarado@geologia.unam.mx, Jesús Alvarado-Ortega~Universidad Nacional Autónoma de; Birmingham~s.giles.1@bham.ac.uk, Sam Giles~University of Oxford and University of (2020-06-21). "A long snout enchodontid fish (Aulopiformes: Enchodontidae) from the Early Cretaceous deposits at the El Chango quarry, Chiapas, southeastern Mexico: A multi-approach study". Palaeontologia Electronica. Retrieved 2024-12-27.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Geology, British Museum (Natural History) Department of; Woodward, Arthur Smith (1901). Catalogue of the Fossil Fishes in the British Museum (Natural History): Actinopterygian Teleostomi of the suborders Isospondyli (in part), Ostariophysi, Apodes, Percesoces, Hemibranchii, Acanthopterygii, and Anacanthini. order of the Trustees.
- ^ "PBDB Taxon". paleobiodb.org. Retrieved 2024-12-26.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
FWEnchodus2
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ a b Cavin, Lionel; Alexopoulos, Apostolos; Piuz, André (2012-12-01). "Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) ray-finned fishes from the island of Gavdos, southern Greece, with comments on the evolutionary history of the aulopiform teleost Enchodus". Bulletin de la Société Géologique de France. 183 (6): 561–572. doi:10.2113/gssgfbull.183.6.561. ISSN 0037-9409.
- ^ Friedman, M. (2012-01-01). "Ray-finned fishes (Osteichthyes, Actinopterygii) from the type Maastrichtian, the Netherlands and Belgium". Scripta Geologica. Special Issue. 08: 113–142. ISSN 0922-4564.
- ^ Gouiric Cavalli, Soledad; Cione, Alberto Luis; Tineo, David; Pérez, Leandro Martín; Iribarne, Martín; Allcca Torres, Miguel A.; Poire, Daniel Gustavo (2020). "The first Peruvian record of Enchodus (Osteichthyes, Aulopiformes, Enchodontidae) in the Upper Cretaceous Vivian Formation". Andean Geology. doi:10.5027/andgeoV48n2-3337. ISSN 0718-7092.
- ^ "Enchodus libycus". Mundo Fosil. Archived from the original on 2014-11-14. Retrieved 2015-05-13.
- ^ a b Díaz-Cruz, Jesús Alberto; Alvarado-Ortega, Jesús; Ramírez-Sánchez, Marcia M.; Bernard, Emma Louise; Allington-Jones, Lu; Graham, Mark (November 2021). "Phylogenetic morphometrics, geometric morphometrics and the Mexican fossils to understand evolutionary trends of enchodontid fishes". Journal of South American Earth Sciences. 111: 103492. Bibcode:2021JSAES.11103492D. doi:10.1016/j.jsames.2021.103492.
- ^ Everhart, Mike (2013). "Enchodus sp. - The Sabre-Toothed Fish of the Cretaceous". Oceans of Kansas. Archived from the original on November 18, 2022.
- ^ Chida, Mori; Brinkman, Donald B.; Murray, Alison M. (October 2023). "A large, new dercetid fish (Teleostei: Aulopiformes) from the Campanian Bearpaw Formation of Alberta, Canada". Cretaceous Research. 150: 105579. Bibcode:2023CrRes.15005579C. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2023.105579. S2CID 258803963.
- ^ Everhart, M.J. (2017). Oceans of Kansas, Second Edition: A Natural History of the Western Interior Sea (Life of the Past). Indiana University Press. p. 117. ISBN 978-0253026323.
- ^ Enchodus at Fossilworks.org
Further reading
[edit]- Cope, Edward Drinker (1875). "Review of the Vertebrata of the Cretaceous Period Found West of the Mississippi River". Bulletin of the United States Geological and Geographical Survey of the Territories. 1 (2): 5–16. OCLC 879313308. Gale BAGPVO689069586.
- Everhart, Mike (2013). "Enchodus sp. - The Sabre-Toothed Fish of the Cretaceous". Oceans of Kansas. Archived from the original on November 18, 2022.
- Russell, Dale A. (1988). A Check List of North American Marine Cretaceous Vertebrates Including Fresh Water Fishes. Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology. ISBN 978-1-55006-106-2.
- Davis, Matthew P.; Fielitz, Christopher (December 2010). "Estimating divergence times of lizardfishes and their allies (Euteleostei: Aulopiformes) and the timing of deep-sea adaptations". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 57 (3): 1194–1208. Bibcode:2010MolPE..57.1194D. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2010.09.003. PMID 20854916.
External links
[edit]- Media related to Enchodus at Wikimedia Commons
- Introduction to Paleontology
- Enchodontidae
- Prehistoric ray-finned fish genera
- Cretaceous bony fish
- Paleocene fish
- Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary
- Late Cretaceous genus first appearances
- Eocene genus extinctions
- Late Cretaceous fish of North America
- Demopolis Chalk
- Mooreville Chalk
- Mesozoic fish of Europe
- Eocene fish of Europe
- Cretaceous Sweden
- Fossils of Sweden
- Prehistoric fish of South America
- Tiupampan
- Paleogene Bolivia
- Cretaceous Bolivia
- Fossils of Bolivia
- Santa Lucía Formation
- Cretaceous Brazil
- Fossils of Brazil
- Fossil taxa described in 1835
- Taxa named by Louis Agassiz