Snakeheads (Primitive fish)

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King-eL

Polypterus
MFK Member
Nov 28, 2008
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Philippines and Canada
Well snakeheads are also primitive fish and the first snakehead to appear was about 50 million years ago near Pakistan as fossil records shows.

I keep wondering why most forum don't add snakeheads to Ancient fish section or primitive fish section.

Bohme combed through the fossil record of snakeheads worldwide and found two major movements of the fish. Snakeheads first appeared near Pakistan around 50 million years ago. In their first diaspora, around 17.5 million years ago, they began showing up in Western Europe Western Europe

The countries of western Europe, especially those that are allied with the United States and Canada in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (established 1949 and usually known as NATO). , Kazakhstan, and southern Siberia. This corresponds to a well-known brief period of warming in the Northern Hemisphere between 25 million and 17 million years ago. It occurred when Antarctica, but not the Arctic, froze, pushing equatorial temperatures northward. Bohme's findings suggest that, along with a Eurasian temperature increase, there was also a boost in summer rainfall there.

Then, 13 million years ago, snakehead fossils disappeared from Europe. About that time, Earth began another long period of cooling, but the change in distribution of snakehead fish indicates that the Eurasian summers were getting dryer as well, Bohme concludes.

The snakehead's second mass exodus came around 8 million years ago. Snakeheads made their way from the Indian subcontinent into China and Africa, where they're found in abundance today. This migration, Bohme found, corresponds with an already recognized intensification of the Asian monsoon system. The warm, humid air from the southern Atlantic and Indian Oceans crashed into the cold, dry air of the then-young Himalayas, causing massive rainfall in Southeast Asia and Africa.

Many forums considered nakedback knifefish as primitive fish when they only started to appeared about 10 million years ago.
 
Darth Scohin;3635537; said:
Ya know I'd be willing to bet $$$ that Polypterus and Snakeheads are related? I demand a DNA ancestry analysis

No they are not related but they are the same class under "Actinopterygii" which are called ray-finned fish.

Class: Actinopterygii


 
There are actually other primitive fish that most forums don't even considered in there ancient or primitive fish sections, such as the Family Erythrinidae - Trahiras a.k.a wolffish which appeared around late Jurassic-Upper Cretaceous which is much older than Polypteridae - bichirs and ropefish. Same goes with some species of catfish which also appeared around late Jurassic and some which still exist today such as the Sisoridae (Bagarius), Siluridae (Sheatcatfish), Loricariidae (pleco) and many other catfish appeared the same time when the bichirs also appeared. Same goes with some species of Cyprinidae such as some species labeos and barbus which also appeared around 65 million years ago. Also the true eel species (Not the spiny eel or the swamp eel) also appeared around mid-Cretaceous. There are just too many living primitive fish that are too many to list down.
 
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