Squatinactis

Squatinactis is a genus of extinct elasmobranch Chondrichthyes known from the Carboniferous aged Bear Gulch Limestone in Montana.[1] This fish was discovered in 1974 by Richard Lund.[1] The type specimen, named CMNH 46133, consists of a brain case, poorly preserved jaws and gills, a pectoral fin, and a partial vertebral axis.[1] This creatures most startling feature were its broad pectoral fins which resembled those of stingrays and angel sharks (Squatina).[1] The holotype specimen has about 15 teeth in its jaw.[1] This creature is named after the angel shark.[1] Remains found in the South Urals of Russia and the Eyam Limestone of Derbyshire, England, have been tentatively identified as those belonging to S. caudispinatus.[2][3]

Squatinactis
Temporal range:
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Chondrichthyes
Subclass: Elasmobranchii
Zangerl, 1981
Order: Squatinactiformes
Cappetta et al., 1993
Family: Squatinactidae
Lund and Zangerl, 1974
Genus: Squatinactis
Lund and Zangerl, 1974
Species
  • S. caudispinatus Lund and Zangerl, 1974 (type)
  • S. glabrum Ginter, 1999
  • S. multicuspidatus Ivanov et al., 2023

Description

Squatinactis had a flattened body with a set of large pectoral fins. This fish was vaguely similar to today's stingrays and angel sharks. The fins were oddly pointed forward, with a length of around two feet long. It also had a long, whip-like tail with a spine (a feature analogous to some rays) that was actually a modified, secondary dorsal fin.[1] The snout was short and the wide mouth was equipped with a series of long conical cladodont-shaped teeth. The body was covered in a few placoid scales, but most of the surface was bare.[1]

Classification

Because of the bizarre nature of Squatinactis, it is somewhat difficult to classify. In the original study conducted in 1974, Lund noted that the teeth of this fish are Cladodont is design,[1] however the term "cladodont" is used to describe many Paleozoic chondrichthyeans based on their teeth and not phylogeny (including Cladoselache, Ctenacanthus, and Dracopristis). This fish is currently classed within the Elasmobranchii, more specially in its own grouping, the Squatinactiformes.[4]

Elasmobranchii

Thrinacoselache

Doliodus

Cladoselache

Squatinactis

Triodus

Orthacanthus

Dracopristis

Ctenacanthus

Homalodontus

Hopleacanthus

Wodnika

Tristychius

Surcaudalus

Bandringa

Sphenacanthus

Gansuselache

Onychoselache

Hamiltonicthys

Phylogenetic position of S. caudispinatus as reconstructed by Hodnett & Grogan 2021.

Ecology

This fish was probably a benthic predator; it probably lived half-buried in the sand and suddenly emerged to throw itself against the prey swimming nearby. The wing-like fins and long tail were most likely useful for propulsion from the seabed. The flattened body plan is typical of bottom-dwelling predators, and is known in a large number of cartilaginous fish, both extinct and extant.

References

  1. Lund, Richard (1988-09-23). "New information on Squatinactis caudispinatus (Chondrichthyes, Cladodontida) from the Chesterian Bear Gulch Limestone of Montana". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 8 (3): 340–342. doi:10.1080/02724634.1988.10011718. ISSN 0272-4634.
  2. Ivanov, A. (January 1996). "The Early Carboniferous chondrichthyans of the South Urals, Russia". Geological Society, London, Special Publications. 107 (1): 417–425. doi:10.1144/GSL.SP.1996.107.01.29. ISSN 0305-8719.
  3. Ginter, Michał; Duffin, Christopher; Dean, Mark; Korn, Dieter (2014). "Late Viséan pelagic chondrichthyans from northern Europe". Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. doi:10.4202/app.00084.2014.
  4. Ginter, M. (2012-08-17). Chondrichthyes, Paleozoic Elasmobranchii: Teeth. In H.P. Schultze (ed.), Handbook of Paleoichthyology 3D. pp. 1–168.
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