Homostiidae

Last updated

Homostiidae
Temporal range: Early Devonian–Middle Devonian
Homostius2DB.jpg
Homosteus milleri
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Placodermi
Order: Arthrodira
Suborder: Brachythoraci
Family: Homostiidae
Jaekel, 1903
Type species
Homosteus formosissimus
Asmuss, 1856
Genera
Synonyms
  • Chelonichthyidae Dean, 1901
  • Euleptaspididae Obruchev, 1964 [1] :70
  • (order) Temnothoraci Dean, 1901
  • (suborder) Homostei Jaekel, 1911

Homostiidae (alternatively spelled Homosteidae) is a family of flattened arthrodire placoderms from the Early to Middle Devonian. Fossils appear in various strata in Europe, Russia, Morocco, Australia, Canada and Greenland.

Contents

Homostiids have flattened and elongated skulls, "toothless" jaws and large sizes, suggesting that many were probably filter feeders, similar to the noticeably flattened whale shark. [2] [3] [4] [5] According to Denison 1978, primitive homostiids have moderately long median dorsal plates, whereas in "advanced" homostiids, the median dorsal tends to be short and broad. [1] :69

Classification

The family Homostiidae is considered the basal-most grouping within the suborder Brachythoraci, basal to the large sub-clade Eubrachythoraci, which includes the well-known Dunkleosteus , Dinichthys , etc. Homostiidae's placement within Brachythoraci can be shown in the cladogram below: [6]

Brachythoraci
Homostiidae

Homostius sulcatus

Antineosteus lehmani

Buchanosteoidea

Buchanosteus confertituberculatus

Goodradigbeeon australianum

Parabuchanosteus murrumbidgeeni

Dhanguura johnstoni

Gemuendenaspis angusta

Xiangshuiosteus wui

Eubrachythoraci
Coccosteomorphi
Coccosteoidea

Coccosteidae

Panxiosteidae

Incisoscutoidea

Pachyosteomorphi

Rhachiosteus pterygiatus

Dunkleosteoidea

Aspinothoracidi

Genera

Angarichthys

A comparatively large animal from the Middle Devonian of Siberia, with a head shield estimated around 40 centimeters long. Known only from an infragnathal bone, and an intero-lateral and a marginal plate.

Antineosteus

A primitive homostiid from Emsian-aged strata of Morocco. Antineosteus' primitive anatomical features suggest it may be a precursor to Angarichthys, Atlantidosteus and Homosteus. Antineosteus lived sympatrically with the Moroccan species of Atlantidosteus.

Atlantidosteus

This genus is known from species found in Emsian-aged Morocco and Middle Devonian Australia. Overall form is very similar to Antineosteus and Homosteus.

Cavanosteus

A primitive genus from Emsian-aged strata of Australia

Cathlesichthys

A genus of homostiid from Wee Jasper, living during the Early Devonian.

Euleptaspis

This genus is known from isolated plates and fragments from Lower Devonian-aged strata in Spitzbergen and Germany. The holotype of the type species, E. depressa, is a paranuchal plate very similar to those seen in coccosteids.

Dhanguura?

A very large, primitive form from the Early Devonian Taemas-Wee Jasper Reef fauna. Its discoverer, Gavin Young, hypothesizes that it may have been a filter-feeder.

Homosteus

The type genus, known from both complete and fragmentary fossils in Europe, Russia, and North America.

Lophostracon

Luetkeichthys

Tityosteus

Tityosteus is thought to be the largest vertebrate known from the Lower Devonian, with an estimated length of 2.5 meters. The holotype is an incomplete individual from the Hunsrück. [1] :73

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Arthrodira</span> Extinct order of fishes

Arthrodira is an order of extinct armored, jawed fishes of the class Placodermi that flourished in the Devonian period before their sudden extinction, surviving for about 50 million years and penetrating most marine ecological niches. Arthrodires were the largest and most diverse of all groups of placoderms.

<i>Drepanaspis</i> Extinct genus of jawless fishes

Drepanaspis is an extinct genus of primitive jawless Ostracoderms from the Early Devonian that belonged to the phylum Chordata, infraphylum Agnatha, class Pteraspidomorphi, and the subclass Heterostraci. Drepanaspis are assumed to have lived primarily in marine environments and is most commonly characterized by their ray-like, heavily armored bodies, along with their lack of paired fins and jaws.

<i>Titanichthys</i>

Titanichthys is an extinct genus of giant, aberrant marine placoderm from shallow seas of the Late Devonian of Morocco, Eastern North America, and possibly Europe. Many of the species approached Dunkleosteus in size and build. Unlike its relative, however, the various species of Titanichthys had small, ineffective-looking mouth-plates that lacked a sharp cutting edge. It is assumed that Titanichthys was a filter feeder that used its capacious mouth to swallow or inhale schools of small, anchovy-like fish, or possibly krill-like zooplankton, and that the mouth-plates retained the prey while allowing the water to escape as it closed its mouth. A study has since confirmed this assumption as its jaws are functionally closer to that of filter feeders like baleen whales and basking sharks, and it appears to have developed from benthic durophagists that became pelagic suspension feeders. This would make it the first (known) large-sized vertebrate filter feeder. Titanichthys was estimated to have reached a length of 7–7.6 m (23–25 ft), but Engelman (2023) suggested that Titanichthys was comparable in size to Dunkleosteus, likely measuring about or just over 4.1 metres (13.5 ft) in length.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Acanthothoraci</span> Extinct order of fishes

Acanthothoraci is an extinct group of chimaera-like placoderms who were closely related to the rhenanid placoderms. Superficially, the acanthoracids resembled scaly chimaeras, or (relatively) heavily armored ptyctodonts. They were distinguished from chimaeras by the presence of large scales and plates, a pair of large spines that emanate from their chests, tooth-like beak plates, and the typical bone-enhanced placoderm eyeball. They were distinguished from other placoderms due to differences in the anatomy of their skulls, and due to patterns on the skull plates and thoracic plates that are unique to this order.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dunkleosteidae</span> Extinct family of fishes

Dunkleosteidae is an extinct family of arthrodire placoderms that lived during the Devonian period. The gigantic apex predator Dunkleosteus terrelli is the best known member of this group.

<i>Lunaspis</i> Extinct genus of placoderm fish

Lunaspis is an extinct genus of armor-plated petalichthyid placoderm fish that lived in shallow marine environments of the Early Devonian period, from approximately 409.1 to 402.5 million year ago. Fossils have been found in Germany, China and Australia. There are three different identified species of within the genus Lunaspis: L. broilii, L. heroldi, and L. prumiensis.

<i>Homosteus</i> Genus of fossil fishes

Homosteus is a genus of flattened arthrodire placoderm from the Middle Devonian. Fossils are found primarily in Eifelian-epoch aged strata of Europe, Canada, Greenland, and Estonia. All of the species had comparatively large, flattened heads with, as suggested by the upward opening orbits, upward-pointing eyes. These adaptations suggest that the various species were benthic predators. A study on Titanichthys, in contrast, suggests that species of Homosteus may have been filter-feeders instead.

<i>Pachyosteus</i> Genus of fishes (fossil)

Pachyosteus is an extinct monospecific genus of medium-sized selenosteid arthrodire placoderm known from the Upper Frasnian Kellwasserkalk facies of Late Devonian Bad Wildungen, Germany and from the Famennian portions of the Holy Cross Mountains of Poland. The type species Pachyosteus bulla has a broad skull about 7 to 10 centimetres long, a comparatively long median dorsal plate, and a short rostral plate that meets the pineal plate.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Holonematidae</span> Extinct family of fishes

Holonematidae is an extinct family of relatively large arthrodire placoderms from the Early to Late Devonian. Almost all fossil specimens are of armor fragments, though, all have distinctive ornamentation, often of unique arrangements and patterns of tubercles, that are diagnostic of the family. The trunkshield is very elongated, giving the armor an overall "barrel" like appearance.

<i>Xiangshuiosteus</i> Extinct genus of fishes

Xiangshuiosteus wui is an extinct monospecific genus of brachythoracid arthrodire placoderm from the Late Emsian stage of the Early Devonian epoch, discovered in Wuding County of Yunnan province, China. It has recently been reassessed as a dunkleosteid.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Buchanosteidae</span> Extinct family of fishes

Buchanosteidae is a family of arthrodire placoderms that lived from the Early to Middle Devonian. Fossils appear in various strata in Russia, Central Asia, Australia, and China.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Coccosteidae</span> Extinct family of fishes

Coccosteidae is a family of arthrodire placoderms from the Early to Late Devonian. Fossils appear in various strata in Europe, North America and China.

<i>Angarichthys</i>

Angarichthys hyperboreus is an extinct homostiid arthrodire placoderm from the Middle Devonian of Siberia. It is known from an infragnathal plate, an intero-lateral plate, and a marginal plate found from the Middle Devonian strata of the Tynep Series formation, in the Bakhta River basin, Tunguska Plateau. A. hyperboreus differs from Homosteus in that the former's marginal plate has a ridge where the central plate would have overlapped it, and in the infragnathal, which is curved sigmoidally, and bears at least seven tooth-like prongs nearer to the functional anterior end.

Microbrachius is an extinct genus of tiny, advanced antiarch placoderms closely related to the bothriolepids. Specimens range in age from the Lower Devonian Late Emsian Stage to the Middle Devonian Upper Givetian Stage. They are characterized by having large heads with short thoracic armor of an average length of 2-4 cm. There are patterns of small, but noticeable tubercles on the armor, with the arrangement varying from species to species. Specimens of Microbrachius have been found in Scotland, Belarus, Estonia, and China.

<i>Heterosteus</i>

Heterosteus is an extinct genus of heterosteid placoderm of the Middle Devonian known from remains discovered in Europe and Greenland. According to Denison, 1978, Heterosteus might have been planktivorous, along with Homosteus, and Titanichthys.

<i>Yinostius</i>

Yinostius is an extinct genus of heterosteid placoderm of the Middle Devonian known from remains discovered in China.

<i>Tityosteus</i> Extinct genus of fish

Tityosteus is an extinct genus of homostiid arthrodire from the Early Emsian of the Early Devonian, with fossils known from Germany, the Ibero-Armorican Trough, and southern Siberia. It attained a length of 2.5 meters.

<i>Antineosteus</i>

Antineosteus is an extinct genus of homostiid arthrodire from the Emsian, Early Devonian Kess-Kess Mounds, in the eastern Anti-Atlas Mountains, Morocco, and the Barrandian area of the Czech Republic.

Atlantidosteus is an extinct genus of homostiid arthrodire from the Early to Middle Devonian of Morocco and Queensland. It contains two known species, A. hollardi and A. pacifica.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Migmatocephala</span> Clade of fish

Migmatocephala is a clade of placoderm fish within the suborder Brachythoraci. Migmatocephala includes the homostiids Taemasosteus?, Tityosteus, Antineosteus, Atlantidosteus, and Homosteus.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Denison R (1978). Handbook of Paleoichthyology. Vol. 2: Placodermi. Stuttgart New York: Gustav Fischer Verlag. ISBN   978-0-89574-027-4.
  2. "Před 400 milióny lety u nás žili gigantičtí obratlovci" [400 million years ago, gigantic vertebrates lived here]. National Museum News (in Czech). 4 December 2014.
  3. Vaškaninová V, Kraft P (2014). "The largest Lower Devonian placoderm-Antineosteus rufus sp. nov. from the Barrandian area (Czech Republic)" (PDF). Bulletin of Geosciences. 89 (3): 635–644.
  4. "Fish from the Emsian of Aragón". 2006. S2CID   218464633.
  5. Coatham SJ, Vinther J, Rayfield EJ, Klug C (May 2020). "Was the Devonian placoderm Titanichthys a suspension feeder?". Royal Society Open Science. 7 (5): 200272. Bibcode:2020RSOS....700272C. doi:10.1098/rsos.200272. PMC   7277245 . PMID   32537223.
  6. Zhu, You-An; Zhu, Min; Wang, Jun-Qing (1 April 2016). "Redescription of Yinostius major (Arthrodira: Heterostiidae) from the Lower Devonian of China, and the interrelationships of Brachythoraci". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society . 176 (4): 806–834. doi: 10.1111/zoj.12356 . ISSN   0024-4082.