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Osteoglossidae

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Osteoglossidae
Temporal range: Campanian to present Possible Albian record
Scleropages leichardti, an osteoglossine from Queensland, Australia
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Osteoglossiformes
Family: Osteoglossidae
Bonaparte, 1831
Genera

See text

Osteoglossidae is a family of large-sized freshwater fish, which includes the arowanas. They are commonly known as bonytongues. The family has been regarded as containing two extant subfamilies Arapaiminae and Osteoglossinae, with a total of five living genera,[1] but these are regarded as valid families in Eschmeyer's Catalog of Fishes[2] The extinct Phareodontinae are known from worldwide during the Late Cretaceous and Paleogene; they are generally considered to be crown group osteoglossids that are more closely related to one of the extant osteoglossid subfamilies than the other, though their exact position varies.[3][4]

Evolution

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Osteoglossids are basal teleosts that originated during the Cretaceous, and are placed in the actinopterygian order Osteoglossiformes. The traditionally defined wider family includes several extant species from South America, one from Africa, two from Asia, and two from Australia.[5] The earliest known osteoglossid is Cretophareodus from the middle Campanian of the Dinosaur Park Formation, Canada, but a potentially older genus may be Chanopsis from the Albian of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.[6]

Although currently restricted to freshwater habitats in the tropics, the group was much more widespread during the Cretaceous and Paleogene, with genera known from North America and Europe, including marine taxa such as Brychaetus. An indeterminate marine osteoglossid is known to have inhabited the seas around Greenland in the Early Paleocene, and they later become diverse in marine habitats during the Eocene, with many genera known from Europe.[7][8]

Modern osteoglossids of both subfamilies have a roughly Gondwanan distribution confined to freshwater habitats. For this reason, it was formerly assumed that extant osteoglossids descend from an ancestor that inhabited the supercontinent of Gondwana during the Mesozoic, which split into different genera following its fragmentation. However, more recent studies have found that many of the closest extinct relatives to extant osteoglossid genera were marine fish, and thus that their current distribution likely originates from marine dispersal between different continents during the Paleogene. Incorporating both extant and extinct osteoglossids, at least four different colonizations of freshwater habitats from marine ones are predicted to have occurred.[4]

Taxonomy

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The following taxa are known from the family:[3][9][10][11]

The Phareodontinae is sometimes treated as a valid family, the Phareodontidae, proposed by Jordan in 1925.[14]

References

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  1. ^ "Arapaim availability". Britannica. Retrieved 1 February 2022.
  2. ^ "Eschmeyer's Catalog of Fishes Classification". California Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 3 November 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d Hilton, Eric J.; Lavoué, Sébastien (2018-10-11). "A review of the systematic biology of fossil and living bony-tongue fishes, Osteoglossomorpha (Actinopterygii: Teleostei)". Neotropical Ichthyology. 16 (3): e180031. doi:10.1590/1982-0224-20180031. ISSN 1679-6225.
  4. ^ a b c d e Capobianco, Alessio; Friedman, Matt (2024). "Fossils indicate marine dispersal in osteoglossid fishes, a classic example of continental vicariance". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 291 (2028). doi:10.1098/rspb.2024.1293. ISSN 0962-8452. PMC 11321865. PMID 39137888.
  5. ^ Allen, G. R.; Midgley, S. H.; Allen, M. (2002). Field Guide to the Freshwater Fishes of Australia. Perth: Western Australia Museum. pp. 56–58. ISBN 0-7307-5486-3.
  6. ^ Near, Thomas J.; Thacker, Christine E. (2024-04-18). "Phylogenetic Classification of Living and Fossil Ray-Finned Fishes (Actinopterygii)". Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History. 65 (1). doi:10.3374/014.065.0101. ISSN 0079-032X.
  7. ^ Capobianco, Alessio; Foreman, Ethan; Friedman, Matt (2021). Cavin, Lionel (ed.). "A Paleocene (Danian) marine osteoglossid (Teleostei, Osteoglossomorpha) from the Nuussuaq Basin of Greenland, with a brief review of Palaeogene marine bonytongue fishes". Papers in Palaeontology. 7 (1): 625–640. Bibcode:2021PPal....7..625C. doi:10.1002/spp2.1291. hdl:2027.42/167033. ISSN 2056-2799.
  8. ^ a b c d e Bonde, Niels (2008). "Osteoglossomorphs of the marine Lower Eocene of Denmark – with remarks on other Eocene taxa and their importance for palaeobiogeography". Geological Society, London, Special Publications. 295 (1): 253–310. Bibcode:2008GSLSP.295..253B. doi:10.1144/SP295.14. ISSN 0305-8719.
  9. ^ Hilton, Eric J.; Carpenter, Jeffrey (2020). "Bony-Tongue Fishes (Teleostei: Osteoglossomorpha) from the Eocene Nanjemoy Formation, Virginia". Northeastern Naturalist. 27 (1): 25–34. doi:10.1656/045.027.0102. ISSN 1092-6194.
  10. ^ Bonde, Niels (2008). "Osteoglossomorphs of the marine Lower Eocene of Denmark – with remarks on other Eocene taxa and their importance for palaeobiogeography". Geological Society, London, Special Publications. 295 (1): 253–310. Bibcode:2008GSLSP.295..253B. doi:10.1144/SP295.14. ISSN 0305-8719.
  11. ^ Capobianco, Alessio (2021). Paleontological Data Reveals Unexpected Biogeographic Histories of Extant Organisms: Bonytongue Fishes (Teleostei: Osteoglossomorpha) as a Case Study (Thesis thesis). hdl:2027.42/170076.
  12. ^ Capobianco, Alessio; Zouhri, Samir; Friedman, Matt (2024-04-17). "A long-snouted marine bonytongue (Teleostei: Osteoglossidae) from the early Eocene of Morocco and the phylogenetic affinities of marine osteoglossids". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. doi:10.1093/zoolinnean/zlae015. ISSN 0024-4082.
  13. ^ Kumar, K.; Rana, R. S.; Paliwal, B. S. (2005). "OSTEOGLOSSID AND LEPISOSTEID FISH REMAINS FROM THE PALEOCENE PALANA FORMATION, RAJASTHAN, INDIA: PALEOCENE FISH REMAINS FROM RAJASTHAN". Palaeontology. 48 (6): 1187–1209. doi:10.1111/j.1475-4983.2005.00519.x.
  14. ^ Richard van der Laan (2018). "Family-group names of fossil fishes". European Journal of Taxonomy. 466: 1–167. doi:10.5852/ejt.2018.466.