Bathyprion
Genus of fish
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bathyprion, is a genus of deepwater marine ray-finned fish belonging to the family Alepocephalidae, the slickheads. Its only extant species is Bathyprion danae, the fangtooth smooth-head. This species is found in the Atlantic and western Pacific Oceans.
| Bathyprion Temporal range: | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Actinopterygii |
| Order: | Alepocephaliformes |
| Family: | Alepocephalidae |
| Genus: | Bathyprion N. B. Marshall, 1966 |
| Species: | B. danae |
| Binomial name | |
| Bathyprion danae N. B. Marshall, 1966 | |
A fossil specimen of an undescribed Bathyprion species has been documented from the Oligocene of the Polish Carpathians. It is one of the very few fossil slickheads known alongside Carpathichthys.[2]
Taxonomy
Bathyprion was first proposed as a monospecific genus in 1966 by the British ichthyologist Norman Bertram Marshall when he described B. danae.[3] B. danae had its type locality given as Australia at 33°26'S, 157°02'E, from a depth of 2,500 m (8,200 ft).[4] This genus is classified in the family Alepocephalidae within the order Alepocephaliformes.[5]
Etymology
Bathyprion combines bathy, meaning "deep", with prion which means "saw", and allusion Marshall did not explain but it may refer to the long, sharp teeth on the upper jaw. The specific name, danae, is a reference to the Danish fishery research vessel Dana, the vessel the holotype was collected from in 1929.[6]
Environment
Distribution
Bathyprion danae is native to the areas of the Eastern Atlantic, Namibia, the North Atlantic, and the western Pacific.[8] It has been found isolated in the area of Madeira.[9] This species has also been recorded to occupy the areas of the European waters, the North West Atlantic, the Portuguese Exclusive Economic Zone, and the Spanish Exclusive Economic Zone.[10]