Morphological variation in the first vertebra among acanthomorph fishes – a guide for identifying fossil centra from microvertebrate sites

Innumerable fossil fish specimens have been recovered from fossil microvertebrate sites – areas in which small, isolated elements of the skeleton from multiple individuals have been amassed. The accumulated skeletal remains, often the result of transportation by moving waters, provide an important w...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Vertebrate Anatomy Morphology Palaeontology
Main Authors: Alison M Murray, Don B. Brinkman
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: University of Alberta Libraries 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.18435/vamp29392
https://doaj.org/article/4e76d91463104092b1a31190ec52bb25
Description
Summary:Innumerable fossil fish specimens have been recovered from fossil microvertebrate sites – areas in which small, isolated elements of the skeleton from multiple individuals have been amassed. The accumulated skeletal remains, often the result of transportation by moving waters, provide an important window on the fauna that was present in a wider area during a broader period of time than that represented by individual articulated specimens. Although microvertebrate localities provide important records of taxa, the disarticulated condition of the fossil elements can cause difficulties for taxonomic identification. This is particularly true for fish, which are most commonly represented in microfossil sites by vertebral centra; however, fish centra are notoriously difficult to identify at lower taxonomic levels, partly because of the vast numbers of living fish and lack of comparative collections. Arguably, the most distinctive vertebral centrum among all fish is the first abdominal centrum of Acanthomorpha. In acanthomorphs, in contrast to all other fishes, the first centrum bears two distinct (separate left and right) facets for articulation with the exoccipitals, which are normally positioned more or less dorsolateral to the articular facet for the basioccipital, forming a unique tri-partite morphology. We here document the first centrum of numerous acanthomorph fishes, and assess the morphologies for taxonomic or phylogenetic consistencies that would allow us to identify isolated centra to a particular acanthomorph group. Features we document include: whether the neural arch is fused to the centrum (as in the paracanthopterygians Lota lota and Percopsis omiscomaycus) or autogenous (most acanthopterygians); whether the left and right facets for the exoccipitals meet in the midline (e.g., Boops boops) or are widely separated (e.g., percids and scorpaenids); and the bone texture on the centrum which may be an anastomosed network forming many small spaces (e.g., Scomber spp.) or a more solid network with no spaces ...