Stenosteus

Genus of fishes (fossil) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stenosteus is an extinct monospecific genus of medium-sized selenosteid arthrodire placoderms of the Late Devonian period known from the Upper Famennian Cleveland Shale of Ohio. Estimated skull lengths range from 6 to 9 centimeters[1] Most fossils of Stenosteus have been scraps of armor and portions of tooth-plates suggestive of Selenosteus. In 1996, enough material of a new species, S. angustopectus, was recovered to allow a reconstruction of armor that resembles that of Selenosteus.[2]

Phylum:Chordata
Class:Placodermi
Order:Arthrodira
Suborder:Brachythoraci
Quick facts Scientific classification, Type species ...
Stenosteus
Temporal range: Late Devonian: Famennian, 371.1–359.3 Ma
Stenosteus angustopectus
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Placodermi
Order: Arthrodira
Suborder: Brachythoraci
Family: Selenosteidae
Genus: Stenosteus
Dean, 1901
Type species
Stenosteus glaber
Dean, 1901
Species
  • S. glaber Dean, 1901
  • S. pertenius Branson, 1911
  • S. angustopectus Carr, 1996
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Phylogeny

Stenosteus is a member of the family Selenosteidae of the clade Aspinothoracidi, which belongs to the clade Pachyosteomorphi, one of the two major clades within Eubrachythoraci. The cladogram below shows the phylogeny of Stenosteus:[3]

Eubrachythoraci

References

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