new teleostei:osteoglossidae species? PICS PLS

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kriztu

Fire Eel
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May 11, 2005
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saw this article from this site: http://www.bioone.org/perlserv/?req...=0272-4634&volume=020&issue=01&page=0012&ct=1

A NEW SPECIES OF JOFFRICHTHYS (TELEOSTEI: OSTEOGLOSSIDAE) FROM THE SENTINEL BUTTE FORMATION, (PALEOCENE) OF NORTH DAKOTA, USA

M. G. NEWBREYA and M. A. BOZEKB

A. Biology Department, College of Letters and Sciences, University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point, Wisconsin 54481, B. Wisconsin Cooperative Fishery Research Unit, College of Natural Resources, University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point, Wisconsin 54481

Joffrichthys triangulpterus, sp. nov. is a new species of the family Osteoglossidae, and is described based on two nearly complete, and two partial, articulated specimens from the Sentinel Butte Formation in the Fort Union Group (Paleocene) of central North Dakota, USA. The familial placement is based on three diagnostic characters: uroneurals absent; six hypurals; and a kidney shaped opercle. The generic placement into Joffrichthys is based on two diagnostic characters and eight similar morphologies and meristics shared between the new species and previously described J. symmetropterus: two complete or partial neural spines present on preural 2; one spine or no spines present on ural 1; similar shapes of the maxillary, dentary, preopercle, opercle, and frontal; a similar body silhouette; and a similar vertebral and supraneural count. The specimens are identified as a new species by nine diagnostic characteristics distinguishing it from J. symmetropterus, the most closely related taxon: more posteriorly-placed pelvic fins; a greater dorsal fin ray count (30 total); a triangular dorsal and anal fin; asymmetrically positioned dorsal and anal fins (anterior pterygiophore insertions separated by 8 to 9 vertebrae); the third dorsal and fifth anal pterygiophores being the longest; and two complete spines on preural 2. The North Dakota fish is important because it represents a new species of Joffrichthys and represents the most southern occurrence of the genus to date.

Received: January 7, 1999; Accepted: September 27, 1999


ANY PICS OF THIS FISH GUYS?
 
interesting.. i would want to see pics too
 
Crap, I was hoping there would be pics too.
 
I tried doing a search on them and I believe they're extinct, just reclassified... there are other extinct species of aros including...
Genus Brychaetus
Brychaetus muelleri (Agassiz, 1845) is known from the Late Cretaceous to the Paleocene. Its fossils have been found in Europe, North America, and northern Africa. This freshwater fish had very long, blunt teeth. Platops and Pomphractus are synonyms. •
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Genus Joffrichthys
This North American genus includes two species, J. symmetropterus and J. triangulpterus. The latter species is known from the Paleocene of the Sentinel Butte Formation of North Dakota, U.S.A. •
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Genus Phareodus
This genus includes at least two species, P. testis (Leidy, 1873) and P. encaustus. Representatives have been found from the middle Eocene to the Oligocene of Australia and North America, including the Green River Formation in Wyoming, U.S.A.

P. testis was a freshwater fish with an oval outline, a small head, and a slightly pointed snout. Its dorsal and anal fins were situated posteriorly, with the anal fin being larger. Its caudal fin was slightly forked. It had small pelvic fins but long, narrow pectorals. It is synonymous with Dapedoglossus.

Check out the article here... http://www.yawiki.org/proc/Arowana
 
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