Revision and description of the actinopterygian fishes of Devonian Eastern Gondwana

This thesis examines the total diversity of fossil actinopterygian or ray-finned fishes of Devonian Gondwana. The bulk of the material comprises newly prepared specimens from the famous Late Devonian (Frasnian) Gogo Formation of Western Australia, much of which was collected in the 2005 field season...

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Main Author: Choo, Brian
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: The Australian National University 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.25911/5d611c4342fe3
https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/150190
id ftdatacite:10.25911/5d611c4342fe3
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic QE852.O45 C56 2010
Osteichthyes, Fossi Australia
Osteichthyes, Fossi Antarctica
Osteichthyes, Fossi South America
Paleontology Devonian
Paleontology Australia
Paleontology Antarctica
Paleontology South America
spellingShingle QE852.O45 C56 2010
Osteichthyes, Fossi Australia
Osteichthyes, Fossi Antarctica
Osteichthyes, Fossi South America
Paleontology Devonian
Paleontology Australia
Paleontology Antarctica
Paleontology South America
Choo, Brian
Revision and description of the actinopterygian fishes of Devonian Eastern Gondwana
topic_facet QE852.O45 C56 2010
Osteichthyes, Fossi Australia
Osteichthyes, Fossi Antarctica
Osteichthyes, Fossi South America
Paleontology Devonian
Paleontology Australia
Paleontology Antarctica
Paleontology South America
description This thesis examines the total diversity of fossil actinopterygian or ray-finned fishes of Devonian Gondwana. The bulk of the material comprises newly prepared specimens from the famous Late Devonian (Frasnian) Gogo Formation of Western Australia, much of which was collected in the 2005 field season. Also examined are specimens from the Middle Devonian deposits of the Aztec Siltstone, Antarctica; the Bunga Beds of New South Wales and the Mt Howitt fossil sites of Victoria. With the benefit of this new material, I describe new several new genera and species of Devonian actinopterygians and clarify the descriptions of previously described forms. Although still a relatively sparse ichthyofaunal component, the Devonian diversity of the Gondwanan ray-fins was much greater than hithert o recognised, with at least five species present in the Gogo Formation. With an improved understanding of early ray-finned anatomy, characters previously considered primitive or of special diagnostic value are re-evaluated. Newly prepared material from the Aztec Siltstone of Antarctica and the Bunga Beds of New South Wales represent forms similar to Howqualepis rostridens from the Givetian of Victoria. The Antarctic form is named Donnrosenia schaefferi while the Bunga Beds fossil is questionably assigned as a congener of Howqualepis. The similarity of freshwater fossil actinopterygians throughout southeastern Australia and South Victoria Land, Antarctica supports previously described macrovertebrate evidence for a regionally endemic ichthyofauna in the Middle Devonian. Additionally, the pectoral fin of H. rostridens is redescribed and is broader in shape and less extensively unsegmented than previously recognised. Of the five Gogo taxa, the genus Mimia Gardiner and Bartram (1977) is renamed Mimipiscis nom. nov. due to preoccupation. Newly available material of the type species, Mimipiscis toombsi, reveals ontogenetic variability in ornamentation and new data on the parasphenoid and shape of the caudal fin. A second form, Mimipiscis bartrami sp. nov., differs from the type species in details of the body shape, squamation, snout, suboperculum and parasphenoid. Two new genera, Gogosardina and Pickeringia gen. nov. are described. Gogosardina is a highly elongate form with a unique arrangement of postrostrals which form the anterior margin of the pineal opening. Pickeringia gen. nov. possesses a highly distinctive spinose ornamentation over the skull, scales and lepidotrichia and extremely large vestibular fontanelles. Specimens of Gogosardina and M. bartrami sp. nov. are known to possess conodont elements within the body cavity suggesting diet and hunting strategies. A phylogenetic analysis of Devonian ray-fins suggests a limited degree of regional endemism in Eastern Gondwana with unique families present on the Gogo reefs and freshwater habitats in southeastern Australia and Southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. The close similarity of the actinopterygian faunas of Antarctica, New South Wales and Victoria adds to an already large body of evidence suggesting a regionally endemic Gondwanan ichthyofauna in the Middle Devonian.
format Thesis
author Choo, Brian
author_facet Choo, Brian
author_sort Choo, Brian
title Revision and description of the actinopterygian fishes of Devonian Eastern Gondwana
title_short Revision and description of the actinopterygian fishes of Devonian Eastern Gondwana
title_full Revision and description of the actinopterygian fishes of Devonian Eastern Gondwana
title_fullStr Revision and description of the actinopterygian fishes of Devonian Eastern Gondwana
title_full_unstemmed Revision and description of the actinopterygian fishes of Devonian Eastern Gondwana
title_sort revision and description of the actinopterygian fishes of devonian eastern gondwana
publisher The Australian National University
publishDate 2010
url https://dx.doi.org/10.25911/5d611c4342fe3
https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/150190
long_lat ENVELOPE(-15.838,-15.838,65.776,65.776)
ENVELOPE(-61.100,-61.100,-66.300,-66.300)
ENVELOPE(-150.950,-150.950,-86.317,-86.317)
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
Victoria Land
Bunga
Fossi
Gardiner
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
Victoria Land
Bunga
Fossi
Gardiner
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Victoria Land
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Victoria Land
op_rights Author retains copyright
op_doi https://doi.org/10.25911/5d611c4342fe3
_version_ 1766251386950909952
spelling ftdatacite:10.25911/5d611c4342fe3 2023-05-15T13:49:27+02:00 Revision and description of the actinopterygian fishes of Devonian Eastern Gondwana Choo, Brian 2010 https://dx.doi.org/10.25911/5d611c4342fe3 https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/handle/1885/150190 en eng The Australian National University Author retains copyright QE852.O45 C56 2010 Osteichthyes, Fossi Australia Osteichthyes, Fossi Antarctica Osteichthyes, Fossi South America Paleontology Devonian Paleontology Australia Paleontology Antarctica Paleontology South America Other CreativeWork article Thesis (PhD) 2010 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.25911/5d611c4342fe3 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z This thesis examines the total diversity of fossil actinopterygian or ray-finned fishes of Devonian Gondwana. The bulk of the material comprises newly prepared specimens from the famous Late Devonian (Frasnian) Gogo Formation of Western Australia, much of which was collected in the 2005 field season. Also examined are specimens from the Middle Devonian deposits of the Aztec Siltstone, Antarctica; the Bunga Beds of New South Wales and the Mt Howitt fossil sites of Victoria. With the benefit of this new material, I describe new several new genera and species of Devonian actinopterygians and clarify the descriptions of previously described forms. Although still a relatively sparse ichthyofaunal component, the Devonian diversity of the Gondwanan ray-fins was much greater than hithert o recognised, with at least five species present in the Gogo Formation. With an improved understanding of early ray-finned anatomy, characters previously considered primitive or of special diagnostic value are re-evaluated. Newly prepared material from the Aztec Siltstone of Antarctica and the Bunga Beds of New South Wales represent forms similar to Howqualepis rostridens from the Givetian of Victoria. The Antarctic form is named Donnrosenia schaefferi while the Bunga Beds fossil is questionably assigned as a congener of Howqualepis. The similarity of freshwater fossil actinopterygians throughout southeastern Australia and South Victoria Land, Antarctica supports previously described macrovertebrate evidence for a regionally endemic ichthyofauna in the Middle Devonian. Additionally, the pectoral fin of H. rostridens is redescribed and is broader in shape and less extensively unsegmented than previously recognised. Of the five Gogo taxa, the genus Mimia Gardiner and Bartram (1977) is renamed Mimipiscis nom. nov. due to preoccupation. Newly available material of the type species, Mimipiscis toombsi, reveals ontogenetic variability in ornamentation and new data on the parasphenoid and shape of the caudal fin. A second form, Mimipiscis bartrami sp. nov., differs from the type species in details of the body shape, squamation, snout, suboperculum and parasphenoid. Two new genera, Gogosardina and Pickeringia gen. nov. are described. Gogosardina is a highly elongate form with a unique arrangement of postrostrals which form the anterior margin of the pineal opening. Pickeringia gen. nov. possesses a highly distinctive spinose ornamentation over the skull, scales and lepidotrichia and extremely large vestibular fontanelles. Specimens of Gogosardina and M. bartrami sp. nov. are known to possess conodont elements within the body cavity suggesting diet and hunting strategies. A phylogenetic analysis of Devonian ray-fins suggests a limited degree of regional endemism in Eastern Gondwana with unique families present on the Gogo reefs and freshwater habitats in southeastern Australia and Southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. The close similarity of the actinopterygian faunas of Antarctica, New South Wales and Victoria adds to an already large body of evidence suggesting a regionally endemic Gondwanan ichthyofauna in the Middle Devonian. Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Victoria Land DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic The Antarctic Victoria Land Bunga ENVELOPE(-15.838,-15.838,65.776,65.776) Fossi ENVELOPE(-61.100,-61.100,-66.300,-66.300) Gardiner ENVELOPE(-150.950,-150.950,-86.317,-86.317)