Tristichopterus

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Phylum:Chordata
Genus:Tristichopterus
Egerton, 1861
Tristichopterus
Temporal range: Middle Devonian, Givetian
Fossil in National Museum of Scotland
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Eotetrapodiformes
Family: Tristichopteridae
Genus: Tristichopterus
Egerton, 1861
Species:
T. alatus
Binomial name
Tristichopterus alatus
Egerton, 1861

Tristichopterus is an extinct genus of Devonian eotetrapodiform fish in the family Tristichopteridae. The type species, T. elatus, was first described by Philip Grey Egerton in 1861 from remains of Givetian age found in Scotland.[1] In 2013, a second species, Eusthenopteron kurshi was attributed to the genus based on remains from Latvia, originally assigned to Eusthenopteron, but this has not been universally recognised, With a maximum length of sixty centimetres, is the smallest genus in the family.[2] Tristichopterus was thought by Egerton to be unique for its time period as a fish with ossified vertebral centers, breaking the persistent notochord rule of most Devonian fish.[3] but this was later reinspected and shown to be only partial ossification by Dr. R. H. Traquair.[4]  Tristichopterus alatus closely resembles Eusthenopteron and this sparked some debate after its discovery as to whether it was a separate taxon.[1]

Lithograph

The two first specimens of Tristichopterus were dug up from sediments of the Old Red Sandstone in Caithness by Charles William Peach and described by Sir Philip Egerton in 1861. A lot of confusion has surrounded this taxon as the first specimens lacked head, fin, and dentition osteology. The original classification by Egerton was to put it in the same family as Dipterus with Coelacanthi.[1]

In 1864 and 1865 Peach obtained further specimens of the genus with clear paired fin, head, and dentition osteology that prevented its placement within the Coelacanthi clade with DipterusRamsay Traquair in 1875 instead included Tristichopterus in the Cyclopteridae family.[1] Later Tristichopterus was assigned its own family.

Eusthenopteron foordi and Tristichopterus alatus are fairly similar in a number of regards but have a couple features between them that prevented the dissolution of either genus upon E. foordi’s discovery by Whiteaves in 1883.[4] Eusthenopteron can be distinguished from Tristichopterus by the possession of two fang pairs on the ectopterygoid and posterior coronoid, a very long posterior coronoid (twice as long as anterior and middle), and ethmosphenoid longer than the oticooccipital and a more symmetric caudal fin. Eusthenopteron is also distinctly larger than Tristichopterus.[2] The original defining features that were used to initially separate the two were the greater symmetricity of E. foordi’s caudal fin and the presence of two cutting edges in the laniary teeth of E. foordi.[4]

In 2013, "Eusthenopteron" kurshi, originally described in 2008 from remains found in Latvia, was reassigned to the Tristichopterus in one study,[2] but this reassignment was not recognised by a later 2014 study.[5]

Description

Palaeoecology

References

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