Diplocercides

Extinct genus of fishes From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Diplocercides is an extinct genus of marine coelacanth which lived during the Late Devonian period.

Phylum:Chordata
Family:Diplocercididae
Genus:Diplocercides
Stensiö, 1922
Quick facts Scientific classification, Species ...
Diplocercides
Temporal range: Frasnian to middle Famennian
Diplocercides heiligostockensis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinistia
Family: Diplocercididae
Genus: Diplocercides
Stensiö, 1922
Species
  • D. heiligenstockiensis Jessen, 1966
  • D. kayseri von Koenen, 1895
  • D. jaekeli Stensiö, 1922
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Taxonomy

The following species are known:

Indeterminate remains are known from the Frasnian of Iran.[1] Specimens from South Africa that were formerly assigned to this genus have since been described in their own genus, Serenichthys. Another alleged specimen from the Frasnian-aged Gogo Formation of Australia[3] was also later described in its own genus, Ngamugawi.[4] The species D. davisi Moy-Thomas, 1937, from the Mississippian of Ireland, which was formerly thought to be the only post-Devonian species, is now thought to represent a subadult Rhabdoderma, indicating that Diplocercides likely went extinct by the End-Devonian extinction.[2][5]

Description

Fossils of the species D. kayseri are known to have three-dimensionally preserved cranial endocasts, making it one of the only known coelacanths aside from the extant Latimeria where the shape of the brain is known. These endocasts have been destroyed by serial grinding, but still survive as wax mounts.[3][4] In 2010, three-dimensional specimens of tentative Diplocercides were described from the Gogo Formation of Western Australia, with these also containing preserved endocasts; these were later described in their own genus, Ngamugawi.[3][4][6]

References

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