Ligulalepis

Extinct genus of osteichthyans From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ligulalepis

Ligulalepis is an extinct genus of stem-osteichthyans which lived from the Silurian to the Early Devonian.[1] Ligulalepis was first described from isolated scales found in the Taemas-Wee jasper limestones of New South Wales (Emsian age) by Hans-Peter Schultze (1968)[2] and further material described by Burrow (1994).[3] A nearly complete skull found in the same general location was described in Nature by Basden et al. (2000) claiming the genus was closely related to basal ray-finned fishes (Actinopterygii).[4] In 2015 Flinders University student Benedict King found a more complete new skull of this genus which was formally described by Clement et al. (2018), showing Ligulalepis to be on the stem of all osteichthyans.[5]

Quick Facts Scientific classification, Type species ...
Ligulalepis
Temporal range: Ludlow–Emsian
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Skull of Ligulalepis toombsi
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Osteichthyes
Genus: Ligulalepis
Schultze 1968
Type species
Ligulalepis toombsi
Schultze 1968
Species
  • L. sinensis Burrow, Turner & Wang 2009
  • L. toombsi Schultze 1968
  • L. yunnanensis Wang & Dong 1989
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Life restoration of L. toombsi

See also

References

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