Ctenurella

Ctenurella
Temporal range: Late Devonian
fossil of C. gladbachensis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Placodermi
Order: Ptyctodontida
Genus: Ctenurella
Orvig 1960

Ctenurella ("Little Comb Tail") is an extinct genus of ptyctodont placoderm from the Late Devonian of Germany. The first fossils were found in the Strundevalley in the Paffrather Kalkmulde.

Description

As with other ptyctodonts, the armor of Ctenurella was reduced to a few thin plates on the head and shoulder region. It was also relatively small for a placoderm, at just 13 centimetres (5 in) in length. It had two dorsal fins, with that at the rear of the body being relatively long and low, and large pectoral and pelvic fins. Most ptyctodonts are presumed to have fed on the ocean floor, but the well-developed fins of this genus indicate that it probably also swam in open waters.[1]

Reconstruction of the male (with head clasper) and female

Ctenurella had a long, whip-like tail, large eyes, and robust upper and lower jaw tooth plates. Males also had hook-shaped sex organs, known as claspers. Since analogous features are also found in the unrelated living chimaeras, chimaeras and ptyctodonts are thought to be an example of convergent evolution.[1]

Etymology

The specific name of the type species, C. gladbachensis, is a reference of the place Bergisch Gladbach, where it was founded.[2]

Taxonomy and evolution

The species Ctenurella gardineri was split off into the new genus Austroptyctodus by Long (1997) in his review of the Gogo ptyctodontid species, stipulating that the genus Ctenurella as only coming from the German sites. A new description of Ctenurella gladbachensis by Long (1997) showed that the original restoration had wrongly restored the skull-roof as the central bones do not in fact meet each other behind the nuchal plate.

Ptyctodontid placoderms recently have been shown to give birth to live young, with specimens of pregnant females from two genera, Materpiscis and Austroptyctodus, both from the Gogo Formation of Western Australia, showing the presence of unborn embryos within the mother fishes (Long et al. 2008)

References

  1. 1 2 Palmer, D., ed. (1999). The Marshall Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs and Prehistoric Animals. London: Marshall Editions. p. 31. ISBN 1-84028-152-9.
  2. Hans Martin Weber: Weltberühmte Fische und Krebse aus dem Devon des Strundetals in Bergisch Gladbach, in: Schriften der Bodendenkmalpflege in NRW, Band 9, Hrsg. Thomas Otten, Römisch-Germanisches Museum der Stadt Köln und Verlag von Philipp Zabern, Mainz 2010, S. 24 ff. ISBN 978-3-8053-4204-9
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