Otocephala

Clade of ray-finned fishes From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Otocephala is a clade of ray-finned fishes within the infraclass Teleostei which evolved some 230 million years ago. It is named for the presence of a hearing (otophysic) link from the swimbladder to the inner ear. Other names proposed for the group include Ostarioclupeomorpha and Otomorpha.

Phylum:Chordata
Cohort:Otocephala
Johnson & Patterson, 1996
Quick facts Scientific classification, Subcohorts ...
Otocephala
Temporal range: Late Jurassic (Tithonian) to present
Atlantic menhaden (Brevoortia tyrannus)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Clade: Clupeocephala
Cohort: Otocephala
Johnson & Patterson, 1996
Subcohorts
Synonyms
  • Ostarioclupeomorpha
  • Otomorpha
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The clade contains Clupeiformes (herrings) and Ostariophysi, a group of other orders including Cypriniformes (minnows and allies), Gymnotiformes (knifefish), and Siluriformes (catfish). Otocephala may also contain Alepocephaliformes (slickheads), but as yet (2016) without morphological evidence.

The clade is sister to Euteleostei which contains the majority of bony fish alive today.[1][2][3][4]

In 2015, Benton and colleagues set a "plausible minimum" date for the origin of crown Otocephala as about 228.4 million years ago. They argued that since the oldest locality for any diversity of stem teleosts is the Carnian of Polberg bei Lunz, Austria, whose base is 235 million years old, a rough estimate for Otocephala can be made.[5][6] The earliest known fossil members of the group date to the Tithonian stage of the Late Jurassic, and include the stem-ostariophysan Tischlingerichthys from Germany and the concurrent clupeomorphs Aijaichthys & Ancashichthys from Peru.[7][8]

Taxonomy

The 5th edition of Fishes of the World classifies the Otocephala as a cohort and subdivides it above the level of order as set out below, the classification of extant taxa from the level of order and below follows Eschmeyer's Catalog of Fishes:[9][10][11]


Taxonomy based on:[4][12][13]

  • Cohort Otocephala Johnson & Patterson 1996 [Otomorpha Wiley & Johnson 2010; Ostarioclupeomorpha Arratia 1997]
    • Genus †Kermichthys Taverne 1993
    • Family †Lycoclupeidae Gowda 1968
    • Family †Clupavidae Bertin & Arambourg 1958
    • Subcohort Clupei Wiley & Johnson 2010 [Clupeomorpha Greenwood et al. 1966]
    • Subcohort Alepocephali
    • Subcohort Ostariophysi Sagemehl 1885
      • Genus †Tischlingerichthys Arratia 1997
      • Family †Ancylostylidae Jordan 1923
      • Family †Erythrinolepididae Cockerell 1919 corrig.
      • Section Anotophysa (Rosen & Greenwood 1970) Sagemehl 1885 [Anotophysi Rosen & Greenwood 1970]
      • Section Otophysa (Rosen & Greenwood 1970) Sagemehl 1885 [Otophysi Rosen & Greenwood 1970]
        • Genus †Nardonoides Mayrinck, Brito & Otero, 2014
        • Family †Acronichthyidae Liu et al., 2025[14]
        • Family †Chanoididae Taverne 2005
        • Family †Salminopsidae Gayet 1985
        • Superorder Cypriniphysae [Cypriniphysi Woodward 1901]
        • Superorder Characiphysae (Fink & Fink 1981)
        • Superorder Siluriphysae [Siluriphysi]

Phylogeny

Phylogeny of living groups based on:[15]

Otocephala
Clupei

Clupeiformes (herrings and relatives)

Alepocephali

Alepocephaliformes (slickheads and tubeshoulders)

Ostariophysi
Anotophysa

Gonorynchiformes (milkfish and relatives)

Otophysa
Cypriniphysae

Cypriniformes (minnow, carp, loach)

Characiphysae

Characiformes (tetras and piranhas)

Siluriphysae

Gymnotiformes (knifefish)

Siluriformes (catfish)

References

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