Leptolepis

Leptolepis
Temporal range: 242.0–112.6 Ma

Middle Triassic to Early Cretaceous[1]

Leptolepis knorri, from Solnhofen (Germany). Jurassic
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Leptolepiformes
Family: Leptolepidae
Genus: Leptolepis
Agassiz, 1843
Type species
Cyprinus coryphaenoides

Leptolepis ("delicate scale") is an extinct genus of teleost fish that lived freshwater and marine environments from the Middle Triassic period until the Early Cretaceous. The genus is one of the earliest recognized teleost genera.

Species

  • Leptolepis africana Gardiner 1960
  • Leptolepis autissiodorensis Sauvage 1892
  • Leptolepis brodiei Agassiz 1845
  • Leptolepis concentricus Egerton 1849
  • Leptolepis coryphaenoides Bronn 1830
  • Leptolepis disjectus Woodward 1890
  • Leptolepis gregarius Woodward 1895
  • Leptolepis jaegeri Agassiz 1844
  • Leptolepis knorri Agassiz[2]
  • Leptolepis lowei Woodward 1895
  • Leptolepis macrophthalmus Egerton 1853
  • Leptolepis neumayri Agassiz, L., 1832[3]
  • Leptolepis nevadensis David 1941
  • Leptolepis normandica Nybelin 1962
  • Leptolepis saltviciensis Simpson 1884

[1]

Species formerly placed in Leptolepis

Reconstruction of Waldmanichthys (Leptolepis) koonwarri

Fossil record

As mentioned earlier, fossils of Leptolepis are found in freshwater and marine strata from the Middle Triassic until the Cretaceous (age range: from 242.0 to 112.6 million years ago.). Fossils are known from several localities in Europe, North America, Asia and Australia.[1]

Appearance

Restoration of a Leptolepis school

An average individual of Leptolepis was about 30 centimetres (12 in) long, and superficially resembled the unrelated modern herring. It was the first true bony fish to really live up to the name, possessing a skeleton completely made of bone;[5] some previous genera such as Pholidophorus had skeletons composed of bone and cartilage. Another modern development in Leptolepis were its scales, which lacked the covering still present in previous genera. These two developments made swimming easier, as the bony spine was now more resistant to the pressure caused by the S movements made while swimming.[6]

Mass graves of Leptolepis have indicated that species probably lived in schools which would provide some protection from predators while the creatures fed on surface plankton. Pelagosaurus was a known predator of Leptolepis, as a Pelagosaurus fossil was found with Leptolepis remains in its stomach.

The Morrison cf. Leptolepis

Known only from a single nearly complete skeleton found at Rabbit Valley, Colorado.[7] A 13 centimetres (5 in) fish that was deeper bodied than its co-occurring contemporaries Morrolepis and Hulettia.[7] The Morrison cf. Leptolepis probably had a live mass of about 37 grams (1.3 oz).[7] It is the only teleost fish known from the formation and was morphologically more highly derived than other Morrison fish.[7] A specific example of apomorphy in cf. Leptolepis is its "more modern tail structure" compared to Morrolepis.[7] It is believed to have fed on fish and small invertebrates.[7]

Bibliography

References

  1. 1 2 3 Fossilworks
  2. GBIF
  3. Biolib
  4. Sferco, Emilia, Adriana López-Arbarello, and Ana María Báez. "Phylogenetic relationships of† Luisiella feruglioi (Bordas) and the recognition of a new clade of freshwater teleosts from the Jurassic of Gondwana." BMC evolutionary biology 15.1 (2015): 1.
  5. The virtual petrified wood museum
  6. Palmer, D., ed. (1999). The Marshall Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals. London: Marshall Editions. p. 39. ISBN 1-84028-152-9.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Foster, J. (2007). "cf. Leptolepis." Jurassic West: The Dinosaurs of the Morrison Formation and Their World. Indiana University Press. p. 135.
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