Carangiformes

Order of fishes From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Carangiformes is a large and diverse order of ray-finned fishes within the clade Percomorpha. It is part of a sister clade to the Ovalentaria, alongside its sister group, the Anabantaria (including Anabantiformes and Synbranchiformes).[citation needed] The order includes ecologically diverse groups such as the jacks and trevallies, flatfishes, barracudas, billfishes, and archerfishes.

Quick facts Scientific classification, Type species ...
Carangiformes
Temporal range: Late Paleocene–present
Bluefin trevally (Caranx melampygus)
Remora remora
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Clade: Percomorpha
Order: Carangiformes
Jordan, 1923[1]
Type species
Caranx praeustus
Anonymous [ Bennett ], 1830
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The Carangiformes has traditionally been regarded as a monotypic order with only the family Carangidae within it by taxonomic authorities; other families currently part of the order were previously classified as part of the wider order Perciformes. The 5th edition of Fishes of the World classify six families within Carangiformes,[2] with more recent authorities expanding the order to include up to 30 families, based on phylogenetic evidence.[3]

Description

While the expanded order Carangiformes is primarily defined by molecular data, the core group (suborder Carangoidei) shares specific synapomorphies:

Most carangiforms are medium to large-sized predatory fish, ranging from 22 cm (8.7 in) to 2.5 m (8.2 ft) in length.[citation needed] Body shapes vary from slender and fusiform (e.g., barracudas, cobia) to deep-bodied and laterally compressed (e.g., trevallies, moonfish, flatfishes). Most species are marine, inhabiting primarily tropical and subtropical waters, though some are able to live in freshwater during certain parts of their lives (giant trevally, all archerfish), and some live entirely in freshwater (river tonguesole).

Classification

The order Carangiformes has historically been either subsumed within Perciformes or used exclusively for the families in the suborder Carangoidei (Carangidae, Coryphaenidae, Rachycentridae, Echeneidae, and Nematistiidae). However, recent genetic studies have redefined the group to resolve the paraphyly of Perciformes, incorporating many more groups such as the highly specialized flatfishes.

The earliest known carangiform fossils are species of the moonfish genus Mene from the Late Paleocene of Peru and Tunisia.[5]

Taxonomy

The following classification follows Eschmeyer's Catalog of Fishes (2025):[6]

The following fossil families are also known:[7]

Phylogenies

The following cladogram is based on a 2023 phylogenetic analysis which studied the UCEs of various marine fish:[10]

Carangiformes

Internal relationships of Carangoidei

Within the suborder Carangoidei, Coryphaenidae, Rachycentridae, and Echeneidae have been suggested to comprise a monophyletic grouping (dubbed "Echeneoidea"),[11] which has been recovered as a sister clade to the Carangidae.[12] Additionally, the family Carangidae is paraphyletic in the traditional sense; the "Echeneoidea" clade are more closely related to two carangid subfamilies (Scomberoidinae and Trachinotinae) than they are to the other two subfamilies (Naucratinae and Caranginae). This has been consistently found by studies, which propose the elevation of the subfamily Trachinotinae into the family Trachinotidae to reflect this finding.[11][10]

The following cladogram is based on Girard et al.'s 2020 study of UCEs and morphology:[11]

The following cladogram is based on a 2023 phylogenetic analysis which studied the UCEs of various marine fish:[10]

Carangoidei
Carangidae
Caranginae
98 species analyzed
Naucratinae

References

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