Eusthenodon

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Eusthenodon
Temporal range: 364.7–358.9 Ma Late Devonian (Famennian)
Speculative life restoration of E. wangsjoi
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Eotetrapodiformes
Family: Tristichopteridae
Genus: Eusthenodon
Jarvik, 1952
Type species
Eusthenodon wangsjoi
Jarvik, 1952
Species
  • E. bourdoni Downs et al., 2021[1]
  • E. leganihanne Downs et al., 2023[2]
  • E. wangsjoi Jarvik, 1952

Eusthenodon (Greek for "strong-tooth" – eusthenes- meaning "strong", -odon meaning "tooth") is an extinct genus of marine tristichopterid tetrapodomorphs from the Late Devonian period, ranging between 365 and 359 million years ago (Late Famennian).[3][4][1] They are well known for being a cosmopolitan genus with remains being recovered from East Greenland, Australia, Central Russia, USA (Pennsylvania), and Belgium.[5][6] Compared to the other closely related genera of the Tristichopteridae clade, Eusthenodon was one of the largest lobe-finned fishes (approximately 2.5 meters in length) and among the most derived tristichopterids alongside its close relatives Cabonnichthys and Mandageria.[4][5]

The large size, predatory ecology, and evolutionarily derived characters possessed by Eusthenodon likely contributed to its ability to occupy and flourish in the numerous localities across the world mentioned above. Eusthenodon is attributed to being just one of many cosmopolitan genera within the "Old Red Sandstone" fish faunas of the Upper Devonian.[3][7][8] As a result, it has been hypothesized that diversification of Eusthenodon and other morphologically similar tristichopterids were not restricted by biogeographical barriers and were instead limited only by their individual ecologies and mobility.[8]

Most of the Eusthenodon remains found at these globally distributed localities consisted largely of cranial elements and largely not known from complete skeletons.[5][8][7] Consequently, the majority of available literature covering Eusthenodon primarily focus on the intricacies of the bones associated with the skull in order to investigate the genus and while others draw conclusions from the known characters of Tristichopteridae.[8] Johanson & Ahlberg (1997), in their assessment of new sarcopterygian material, present such conclusions proposing Eusthenodon likely possessed the same trifurcate or diamond-shaped caudal fin with an axial lobe turned slightly dorsally known in other tristichopterids (referred to as eusthenopterids by Johanson) along with a triangular-shaped first dorsal fin.[5]

In 1952, Swedish paleontologist Erik Jarvik first described the first species, Eusthenodon wangsjoi of the genus Eusthenodon.[9] The specimen was retrieved in 1936 from the richly fossiliferous sediments of the Upper Devonian sequences of East Greenland, a region that gained tremendous attraction by vertebrate paleontologists after the discovery of the early limbed vertebrate Ichthyostega.[9] The given name of the genus, Eusthenodon, refers to the distinctly large tusks present in the upper and lower jaws.[9]

The specific name honours Gustav Wängsjö as discoverer. Jarvik originally spelled it as wängsjöi. However, the ICZN forbids the use of diacritics in binomials. In 1962 Vorobyeva emended the specific name to waengsjoei. In 2009 Daniel Snitting and Henning Blom pointed out that this erroneously assumed German umlauts had been present. According to article 32.5.2.1 ICZN the correct spelling is wangsjoi.[10]

Taxonomy

Description

References

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