Eodiaphyodus

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Eodiaphyodus
Temporal range: Late Cretaceous, Campanian–Maastrichtian
Tooth plate of E. granulosus from Morocco
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Albuliformes
Family: Phyllodontidae
Genus: Eodiaphyodus
Casier en Dartvelle & Casier, 1949
Type species
Eodiaphyodus lerichei
Casier en Dartvelle & Casier, 1949
Species
  •  ?E. granulosus Arambourg, 1952
  • E. lerichei Casier en Dartvelle & Casier, 1949

Eodiaphyodus ("dawn Diaphyodus") is an extinct genus of marine phyllodont ray-finned fish known from Late Cretaceous sediments across Africa.[1][2] As with other members of its family, it is primarily known by its fossilized tooth plates, which were likely found in the back of its throat and used to crush its food.[3]

The following species are known:[1]

A potential third species, E. bebianoi Dartevelle & Casier, 1949 from the Paleocene of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, previously referred to Pseudoegertonia, may be a member of this genus, but it is thought to be too fragmentary for a proper taxonomic assessment. The species E. granulosus is also sometimes referred to Pseudoegertonia, though more recent studies do not follow this classification.[1][5]

The oldest known specimens of Eodiaphyodus were found in Campanian rocks in Angola and Nigeria,[3] and it is believed that the genus originated in this part of Africa before dispersing northwards (via the Atlantic coast of West Africa or via the trans-Saharan seaway) to reach northwestern Africa by the Maastrichtian.[1]

References

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