Amiidae
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Amiidae
The Amiidae are a family of basal ray-finned fishes. The bowfin is the only species to survive today, although additional species in all four subfamilies of Amiidae are known from Jurassic, Cretaceous, and Eocene fossils. Bowfins are now found throughout eastern North America, typically in slow-moving backwaters, canals, and ox-bow lakes. When the oxygen level is low (as often happens in still waters), the bowfin can rise to the surface and gulp air into its swim bladder, which is lined with blood vessels and can serve as a primitive lung. Amiidae is a monophyletic group that has numerous synapomorphic characters. Amiidae were widespread and particularly rich in species during the Eocene era. During this era, they appeared to be confined almost exclusively to fresh water. Taxonomy The family is divided into four subfamilies, with 11 genera described: *Amiidae **Subfamily Amiinae ***Genus ''Amia'' ***Genus †'' Cyclurus'' ***Genus †'' Pseudoamiatus'' **Subfamily †Amiopsin ...
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Vidalamiinae
The Amiidae are a family of basal ray-finned fishes. The bowfin is the only species to survive today, although additional species in all four subfamilies of Amiidae are known from Jurassic, Cretaceous, and Eocene fossils. Bowfins are now found throughout eastern North America, typically in slow-moving backwaters, canals, and ox-bow lakes. When the oxygen level is low (as often happens in still waters), the bowfin can rise to the surface and gulp air into its swim bladder, which is lined with blood vessels and can serve as a primitive lung. Amiidae is a monophyletic group that has numerous synapomorphic characters. Amiidae were widespread and particularly rich in species during the Eocene era. During this era, they appeared to be confined almost exclusively to fresh water. Taxonomy The family is divided into four subfamilies, with 11 genera described: *Amiidae **Subfamily Amiinae ***Genus ''Amia'' ***Genus †'' Cyclurus'' ***Genus †'' Pseudoamiatus'' **Subfamily †Amiopsin ...
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Bowfin
The bowfin (''Amia calva'') is a bony fish, native to North America. Common names include mudfish, mud pike, dogfish, grindle, grinnel, swamp trout, and choupique. It is regarded as a relict, being the sole surviving species of the Halecomorphi, a group of fish that first appeared during the Early Triassic, around 250 million years ago. The bowfin is often considered a "primitive fish" because they have retained some morphological characteristics of their early ancestors. The closest living relatives of bowfins are gars, with the two groups being united in the clade Holostei. Bowfins are demersal freshwater piscivores, commonly found throughout much of the eastern United States, and in southern Ontario and Quebec. Fossil deposits indicate Amiiformes were once widespread in both freshwater and marine environments across North and South America, Europe, Asia, and Africa. Now, their range is limited to much of the eastern United States and adjacent southern Canada, including th ...
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Amiinae
The Amiidae are a family of basal ray-finned fishes. The bowfin is the only species to survive today, although additional species in all four subfamilies of Amiidae are known from Jurassic, Cretaceous, and Eocene fossils. Bowfins are now found throughout eastern North America, typically in slow-moving backwaters, canals, and ox-bow lakes. When the oxygen level is low (as often happens in still waters), the bowfin can rise to the surface and gulp air into its swim bladder, which is lined with blood vessels and can serve as a primitive lung. Amiidae is a monophyletic group that has numerous synapomorphic characters. Amiidae were widespread and particularly rich in species during the Eocene era. During this era, they appeared to be confined almost exclusively to fresh water. Taxonomy The family is divided into four subfamilies, with 11 genera described: *Amiidae **Subfamily Amiinae ***Genus ''Amia'' ***Genus †'' Cyclurus'' ***Genus †'' Pseudoamiatus'' **Subfamily †Amiopsin ...
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Maliamia
Maliamia ("Malian bowfin") is an extinct genus of amiid ray-finned fish from the Early Eocene, known from fragmentary remains found in the Tamaguélelt Formation of Mali. It was described in 1989, based on fossils recovered by three separate expeditions in 1975, 1979–80, and 1981. The type species is ''Maliamia gigas,'' named in reference to its large size. Maliamia is currently the youngest known member of Vidalamiinae, an extinct group of bowfin fish that lived from the Early Cretaceous to the Early Eocene. Description ''M. gigas'' is known from isolated jaw remains including premaxillae, vomers, maxillae, and dentaries. These fragments lack teeth due to post-mortem wear, but empty tooth sockets remain, and their arrangement implies that ''M. gigas'' had a single row of teeth. Estimates put the body length of ''M. gigas'' between 1.8 (based on ''Calamopleurus'') and 3.5 meters (based on ''Amia''), making it the largest known member of Vidalamiinae. Paleoenvironment F ...
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Melvius
''Melvius'' is a genus of vidalamiin amiid fish from the Late Cretaceous The Late Cretaceous (100.5–66 Ma) is the younger of two epochs into which the Cretaceous Period is divided in the geologic time scale. Rock strata from this epoch form the Upper Cretaceous Series. The Cretaceous is named after ''creta'', the .... The type species, ''Melvius thomasi'', was described by Bryant in 1987. A second species ''Melvius chauliodous'', was named and described by Hall and Wolburg in 1989,L. Grande and W. E. Bemis. 1998. A comprehensive phylogenetic study of amiid fishes (Amiidae) based on comparative skeletal anatomy. An empirical search for interconnected patterns of natural history. Society of Vertebrate Paleontology Memoir 4. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 18(1, suppl.):1-690 and it is now considered to be one of the index taxa of the Kirtlandian land-vertebrate age. References Amiiformes Prehistoric ray-finned fish genera Late Cretaceous fish of North Ame ...
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Amia (genus)
''Amia'', commonly called bowfin, is a genus of bony fish related to gars in the infraclass Holostei. They are regarded as taxonomic relicts, being the sole surviving species of the order Amiiformes, which dates from the Jurassic to the Eocene, persisting to the present. There is one living species in ''Amia'', ''Amia calva'', and a number of extinct species which have been described from the fossil record. Evolution and phylogeny Competing hypotheses and debates continue over the evolution of ''Amia'' and relatives, including their relationship among basal extant teleosts, and organization of clades. Bowfin are the last remaining member of Halecomorphi, a group that includes many extinct species in several families. Halecomorphs were generally accepted as the sister group to Teleostei but not without question. While a halecostome pattern of neopterygian clades was produced in morphology-based analyses of extant actinopterygians, a different result was produced with fossil taxa w ...
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Amiopsinae
''Amiopsis'' is an extinct genus of prehistoric bony fish belonging to the family Amiidae. Fossils are known from the Late Jurassic Solnhofen Limestone, Germany (''A. lepidota),'' the Early Cretaceous Purbeck Group, England (''A. damoni''), La Pedrera de Rúbies Formation, Spain (''A. woodwardi'') and Bernnissant ''Iguanodon'' locality, Belgium (''A. dolloi'') and the Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian) of the Balkans (''A. prisca'' type species). The monophyly of the genus is questionable, due to it being based on a single character, "the presence of three or more lateral fossae on each side of most abdominal centra". Remains previously assigned to this genus from the Early Cretaceous Las Hoyas, Spain have been moved into the new genus '' Hispanamia.'' See also * Prehistoric fish * List of prehistoric bony fish A ''list'' is any set of items in a row. List or lists may also refer to: People * List (surname) Organizations * List College Albert A. List College of Jewish ...
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Amiiformes
The Amiiformes order of fish has only one extant species, the bowfin (''Amia calva''). These Amiiformes are found in the freshwater systems of North America, in the United States and parts of southern Canada. They live in freshwater streams, rivers, and swamps. Bowfins are not on the endangered list. They have the ability to go to the surface to breathe air if the water level is too low. Characteristics of Amiiformes are a cylindrical body with a long dorsal fin, single gular plate, heterocercal caudal fin, 10 to 13 flattened branchiostegal rays, maxilla included in gape, and prominent ocellus near upper base of caudal fin. Evolution and diversity The extinct species of the Amiiformes can be found as fossils in Asia and Europe, but the bowfin is the last living species in the order. Amiiformes is therefore the last surviving order of Halecomorphi, the clade to which the bowfin and its fossil relatives belong. Other orders, such as the Parasemionotiformes, are all extinct. ...
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Calamopleurus
''Calamopleurus'' is an extinct genus of bowfins, comprising three species: ''C. cylindricus'' and ''C. mawsoni'' from Brazil and ''C. africanus'' from Africa Africa is the world's second-largest and second-most populous continent, after Asia in both cases. At about 30.3 million km2 (11.7 million square miles) including adjacent islands, it covers 6% of Earth's total surface area .... References Amiiformes Prehistoric fish of Africa Prehistoric fish of South America Cretaceous animals of South America Cretaceous Brazil Fossils of Brazil Crato Formation Romualdo Formation Fossil taxa described in 1841 Taxa named by Louis Agassiz {{paleo-rayfinned-fish-stub ...
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Amiopsis
''Amiopsis'' is an extinct genus of prehistoric bony fish belonging to the family Amiidae. Fossils are known from the Late Jurassic Solnhofen Limestone, Germany (''A. lepidota),'' the Early Cretaceous Purbeck Group, England (''A. damoni''), La Pedrera de Rúbies Formation, Spain (''A. woodwardi'') and Bernnissant ''Iguanodon'' locality, Belgium (''A. dolloi'') and the Late Cretaceous (Cenomanian) of the Balkans (''A. prisca'' type species). The monophyly of the genus is questionable, due to it being based on a single character, "the presence of three or more lateral fossae on each side of most abdominal centra". Remains previously assigned to this genus from the Early Cretaceous Las Hoyas, Spain have been moved into the new genus '' Hispanamia.'' See also * Prehistoric fish * List of prehistoric bony fish A ''list'' is any set of items in a row. List or lists may also refer to: People * List (surname) Organizations * List College Albert A. List College of Jewish ...
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