- Source: Acrotemnus
Acrotemnus is an extinct genus of marine pycnodontid ray-finned fish from various areas of the Tethys Sea that lived during the Turonian stage of the Upper Cretaceous. The genus comprises three species A. faba, A. streckeri, and A. megafrendodon.
Description
Acrotemnus was initially known from just the type species A. faba described by Louis Agassiz in 1843 from specimens collected in Niger. However, Shimada, Portillo, and Cronin, 2021 described the specimen TxVP 43056-3 as Acrotemnus cf. A. streckeri lumping the whole genus Macropycnodon into Acrotemnus.
Classification
In its description, Agassiz, 1836 recovers it as a pycnodontid. Shimada, Portillo, and Cronin, 2021 retain this placement in their redescription of A. streckeri, and A. megafrendodon.
See also
Prehistoric fish
List of prehistoric bony fish
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Acrotemnus
- Pycnodontidae
- Scalacurvichthys
- Gyrodus
- Maraldichthys
- Congopycnodus
- Pycnodontiformes
- Coccodontidae
- Hensodon
- Coelodus