Fossil History of Billfishes (Xiphioidei)

This review characterizes each of the five extinct and extant families of billfishes and discusses the relevant literature. Families include: Hemingwayidae (monotypic; late Paleocene, Turkmenistan), Blochiidae (1 genus, 2 species; middle Eocene, Italy), Palaeorhynchidae (4 genera, ca. 22 species; ea...

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Main Author: Fierstine, Harry L.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DigitalCommons@CalPoly 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/bio_fac/22
https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/context/bio_fac/article/1021/viewcontent/FiersH_FossilHistoryBillfishes.pdf
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spelling ftcalpoly:oai:digitalcommons.calpoly.edu:bio_fac-1021 2023-11-12T04:22:20+01:00 Fossil History of Billfishes (Xiphioidei) Fierstine, Harry L. 2006-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/bio_fac/22 https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/context/bio_fac/article/1021/viewcontent/FiersH_FossilHistoryBillfishes.pdf unknown DigitalCommons@CalPoly https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/bio_fac/22 https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/context/bio_fac/article/1021/viewcontent/FiersH_FossilHistoryBillfishes.pdf Biological Sciences Biology text 2006 ftcalpoly 2023-10-17T09:51:25Z This review characterizes each of the five extinct and extant families of billfishes and discusses the relevant literature. Families include: Hemingwayidae (monotypic; late Paleocene, Turkmenistan), Blochiidae (1 genus, 2 species; middle Eocene, Italy), Palaeorhynchidae (4 genera, ca. 22 species; early Eocene-possibly early Miocene, Europe, Iran, Russia, U.S.A.), Xiphiidae that includes the subfamilies Xiphiorhynchinae (1 genus, 9 species; early Eocene-late Oligocene, Egypt, Europe, U.S.A.) and Xiphiinae (monotypic; middle Miocene-present, world-wide temperate- tropical seas), and the Istiophoridae (3 genera, 13 species; middle Miocene-present; world-wide temperate-tropical seas). Billfishes first appeared in the region of the ancient Tethys Sea (or Paratethys), except for the Xiphiinae that first appeared in the western North Atlantic Ocean. Fossil specimens of all five billfish families are usually considered to have had the same environmental preferences as extant billfishes, however, those with upper and lower jaws of equal length were probably less adapted for spearing than those with a disproportionately longer rostrum. Three genera, Aglyptorhynchus, Palaeorhynchus, and Xiphiorhynchus existed for approximately 27 million yrs (Ma) before extinction, whereas the four extant genera Istiophorus, Makaira, Tetrapturus, and Xiphias have been in existence ca. 11 Ma, 15 Ma, 5 Ma, and 15 Ma, respectively. Text North Atlantic DigitalCommons@CalPoly (California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo)
institution Open Polar
collection DigitalCommons@CalPoly (California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo)
op_collection_id ftcalpoly
language unknown
topic Biology
spellingShingle Biology
Fierstine, Harry L.
Fossil History of Billfishes (Xiphioidei)
topic_facet Biology
description This review characterizes each of the five extinct and extant families of billfishes and discusses the relevant literature. Families include: Hemingwayidae (monotypic; late Paleocene, Turkmenistan), Blochiidae (1 genus, 2 species; middle Eocene, Italy), Palaeorhynchidae (4 genera, ca. 22 species; early Eocene-possibly early Miocene, Europe, Iran, Russia, U.S.A.), Xiphiidae that includes the subfamilies Xiphiorhynchinae (1 genus, 9 species; early Eocene-late Oligocene, Egypt, Europe, U.S.A.) and Xiphiinae (monotypic; middle Miocene-present, world-wide temperate- tropical seas), and the Istiophoridae (3 genera, 13 species; middle Miocene-present; world-wide temperate-tropical seas). Billfishes first appeared in the region of the ancient Tethys Sea (or Paratethys), except for the Xiphiinae that first appeared in the western North Atlantic Ocean. Fossil specimens of all five billfish families are usually considered to have had the same environmental preferences as extant billfishes, however, those with upper and lower jaws of equal length were probably less adapted for spearing than those with a disproportionately longer rostrum. Three genera, Aglyptorhynchus, Palaeorhynchus, and Xiphiorhynchus existed for approximately 27 million yrs (Ma) before extinction, whereas the four extant genera Istiophorus, Makaira, Tetrapturus, and Xiphias have been in existence ca. 11 Ma, 15 Ma, 5 Ma, and 15 Ma, respectively.
format Text
author Fierstine, Harry L.
author_facet Fierstine, Harry L.
author_sort Fierstine, Harry L.
title Fossil History of Billfishes (Xiphioidei)
title_short Fossil History of Billfishes (Xiphioidei)
title_full Fossil History of Billfishes (Xiphioidei)
title_fullStr Fossil History of Billfishes (Xiphioidei)
title_full_unstemmed Fossil History of Billfishes (Xiphioidei)
title_sort fossil history of billfishes (xiphioidei)
publisher DigitalCommons@CalPoly
publishDate 2006
url https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/bio_fac/22
https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/context/bio_fac/article/1021/viewcontent/FiersH_FossilHistoryBillfishes.pdf
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source Biological Sciences
op_relation https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/bio_fac/22
https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/context/bio_fac/article/1021/viewcontent/FiersH_FossilHistoryBillfishes.pdf
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