Saurichthys

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File:Saurichthys curionii 1.JPG
Saurichthys curionii fossil from the Middle Triassic of Monte San Giorgio, Switzerland
File:Triassic marine vertebrate apex predators.png
Early Triassic and Middle Triassic marine predators:[1] 3. Saurichthys

Saurichthys (from Template:Langx Script error: No such module "lang"., 'lizard' and Template:Langx Script error: No such module "lang". 'fish') is an extinct genus of predatory ray-finned fish from the Triassic Period. It is the type genus of the family Saurichthyidae (Changhsingian-Middle Jurassic), and the most speciose and longest lasting genus in the family. This family also includes the Permian Eosaurichthys (China) and the Jurassic Saurorhynchus (= Acidorhynchus)[2] from Europe and North America, though it may be more appropriate to treat these as subgenera of Saurichthys, due to the genus Saurichthys otherwise being paraphyletic.[3]

Fossils of Saurichthys have been found on all continents except South America and Antarctica.[4][5][6] It inhabited both marine and freshwater environments.[6][7] The oldest fossils of Saurichthys were recovered from the Wordie Creek Formation in East Greenland and are Griesbachian (Induan, Early Triassic) in age.[8]

Over 50 species of Saurichthys have been described (see list below). The species differ in size and show variability in their skeletal features. The latter can potentially be ascribed to changes in major developmental genes.[9] The use of subgenera (Eosaurichthys, Costasaurichthys, Lepidosaurichthys, Saurorhynchus, Sinosaurichthys) in the literature reflects differences in morphology between species groups.[10] Several species that were described predominantly in the 19th century are based on fragmentary fossils (often isolated teeth). These are mostly considered invalid species by modern taxonomic standards.

Louis Agassiz, who described the type species of Saurichthys in 1834, named it the "lizard fish" because of skeletal features that he thought were intermediate to reptiles and fishes.

Their exact phylogenetic position is uncertain, though it is agreed that they are not members of Neopterygii. Historically, they have been seen as close relatives of the Acipenseriformes (which includes living sturgeon and paddlefish) as part of the Chondrostei, though this has been strongly questioned by modern studies, which suggests that it may lie outside the Actinopterygii crown group.[3]

Appearance

File:Saurichthys (Mensch & Natur-Museum, München).jpg
Saurichthys model at the Museum of Man and Nature, Munich

Saurichthys was an elongate, streamlined fish, commonly about Script error: No such module "convert". to Script error: No such module "convert". long. Some species were only a few decimetres long (e.g. Saurichthys minimahleri), while others could grow up to about Script error: No such module "convert". in length (specimen from the Middle Triassic of Turkey).[11][6]

Species of Saurichthys had an elongate bodyform superficially similar to the modern garfish or needlefish. Its dorsal and anal fins were placed opposite each other well back on the body, and the tail was symmetrical (abbreviate diphycercal[12]). These features would have made it a powerful swimmer.[13] Its jaws were extremely long, making up a third of the total body length, and ended in a sharp, beak-like tip. Two to six longitudinal scale rows are developed, with small scales in between in some species.

The axial skeleton consists of ossified neural and haemal arches. Haemal arches may develop spines. The neural arches often show spines as well as other projections interpreted as prezygapophyses and postzygapophyses. Ossified centra are missing. The axial skeleton shows regionalization, meaning that there are differences in bone morphology between segments of the axial skeleton. Some species show dedifferentiation of the axial skeleton.[14]

Ecology and Evolution

File:Saurichthys seefeldensis.jpg
Saurichthys seefeldensis attacking Preondactylus, based on an outdated interpretation of a gastric pellet now believed to contain remains of Langobardisaurus

Large species of Saurichthys were apex predators among Triassic ray-finned fish, together with the marine Birgeria (Birgeriidae).

Saurichthys is classically interpreted as an ambush predator, similar modern gars and needlefish. It is suggested that it first approached its prey and then suddenly accelerated towards it.[13] Some species may have lived as subsurface cruisers (Sinosaurichthys).[15]

Specimens showing half-swallowed conspecific individuals suggest that cannibalism was relatively common in Saurichthys.[16] Fossil evidence, in the form of a bolus (ball-shaped mass) of bones in the same strata, indicates that Saurichthys attacked marine reptiles such as the tanystropheid Langobardisaurus, or possibly scavenged their corpses.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

A study on the gastrointestinal tract of Saurichthys found similarities with present-day sharks and rays, in particular the many windings in the spiral valve. The many windings increased the surface area for digestion, which is sure to have provided the fish with more energy. It indicates that Saurichthys had an energy-laden lifestyle.[17]

Early Triassic species of Saurichthys[16] differ from later species most prominently in their more elongate postorbital portion of the skull (part of the skull behind the eyes) and their generally denser scale cover. Middle Triassic and Late Triassic species, on the other hand, typically have a short postorbital portion of the skull and their scale cover is reduced. This reduction includes both the number of the longitudinal scale rows and the size of individual scales.[6] These evolutionary trends are, however, not an indication for anagenesis, but rather the result of parallel evolution in different lineages of Saurichthys. The aforementioned trends are observed only in marine species. Late Triassic freshwater species of Saurichthys (e.g., S. orientalis, S. sui) retain an elongate postorbital skull portion and a denser scale cover, suggesting that freshwater environments served as refugia for species with a more primitive appearance.[6][18]

Reproduction

File:Saurichthys curionii with embryos.jpg
Saurichthys curionii with embryos

Fossils of gravid females provide evidence for (ovo-)viviparity in Saurichthys[19] and the oldest known example for viviparity in ray-finned fishes.

Internal fertilisation is also evidenced by specialized pelvic fin rays (Saurichthys calcaratus) or ventral scales (gonopodium; Saurichthys curionii, Saurichthys macrocephalus) that are interpreted as copulatory organs of males.[20]

Species

This list includes species of Saurichthys that are generally considered valid (based on Romano et al.[6] and references cited below). The validity of species that are based on fragmentary material (e.g., isolated scales or teeth) is questionable (see below).

File:Saurichthys apicalis.JPG
Lower jaw of Saurichthys apicalis
File:Saurichthys costasquamosus 455.jpg
Saurichthys costasquamosus fossil
File:Saurichthys macrocephalus.jpg
Saurichthys macrocephalus fossil
File:Saurichthys fossil.jpg
Fossil of Saurichthys sp.
File:Saurichthys sp Zogno.JPG
Fossil of Saurichthys sp.

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Species based on fragmentary fossils

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Synonyms

See also

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References

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  4. Saurichthys at Fossilworks.org
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  23. a b Discovery of two new species of primitive fishes
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  25. Fossilworks: Saurichthys Agassiz 1843

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External links

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