Lignobrycon

Genus of fish From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lignobrycon is a genus of freshwater ray-finned fishes belonging to the family Triportheidae, the hatchet characins. This genus contains one known extant species, L. myersi, and one, or more, extinct species. The fishes in this genus are found in South America.

Fossil specimens of Lignobrycon ligniticus
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Lignobrycon
Temporal range: Oligocene to present
Specimen of L. myersi
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Characiformes
Family: Triportheidae
Subfamily: Triportheinae
Genus: Lignobrycon
C. H. Eigenmann & G. S. Myers, 1929
Type species
Lignobrycon ligniticus
Woodward, 1898
Synonyms
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A fossil species is also known, †Lignobrycon ligniticus (Woodward, 1898), from the Oligocene-aged Tremembé Formation of Brazil. This species was actually the first described member of the genus, and was recovered from lignite deposits, hence the name Lignobrycon. It was only after the description of the fossil L. ligniticus that the extant L. myersi was identified, being described in the genus Moojenichthys. In 1998, the relationship between the fossil and extant species was identified, and L. myersi was also moved to the genus Lignobrycon, making the genus extant once again.[1]

Species

Ligbobrycon contains the following species:

A second potential fossil species, †Lignobrycon altus (Santos, 1946), has also been identified from Late Pliocene/Early Pleistocene-aged shales of Brazil, but these remains are poorly preserved and it may not even represent a characiform.[2][3]

References

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