Did you mean: lobe-finned fish, List of sarcopterygians
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lobe-finned fish (lōb'fĭnd') ![]() |
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| Sci-Tech Encyclopedia: Sarcopterygii |
A name often employed to unite the lobe-fin, or crossopterygian, fishes and the lungfishes as a subclass of the Osteichthyes. The older names Amphibioidei and Cho-anichthyes are equivalent to Sarcopterygii. The structural differences between lobefin fishes and lungfishes are great, and their common ancestry, if any, lies in the Lower Devonian, long antedating the origin of the earliest tetrapods which have since diverged into four classes. It seems best to rank the Crossopterygii (lobefins) and Dipnoi (lungfishes) each equivalent in rank to the subclass Actinopterygii (rayfin fishes), in which the vast majority of fishes are classified. See also Actinopterygii; Crossopterygii; Dipnoi; Osteichthyes.
| WordNet: lobe-finned fish |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
any fish of the order Crossopterygii; most known only in fossil form
Synonyms: crossopterygian, lobefin
| Wikipedia: Sarcopterygii |
| Sarcopterygii Fossil range: Late Silurian–Recent, 418–0 Ma |
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| Coelacanth, Latimeria chalumnae | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Domain: | Eukarya |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Subphylum: | Vertebrata |
| Infraphylum: | Gnathostomata |
| Superclass: | Osteichthyes |
| Class: | Sarcopterygii |
| Subclasses | |
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Sarcopterygii ("fleshy-finned fishes", from Greek σαρξ, sarx, flesh, and πτερυξ, pteryx, fin) -- sometimes considered synonymous with Crossopterygii ("fringe-finned fishes", from Greek κροσσός, krossos, fringe) is a clade (traditionally a class or subclass) of fleshy-finned or lobe-finned fishes, consisting of coelacanths, lungfishes and all tetrapods.
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Sarcopterygians - crossopterygians are bony fish with fleshy, lobed-paired fins fishes, which are joined to the body by a single bone [1]. The fins of crossopterygians differ from those of all other fishes in that each is borne on a fleshy, lobelike, scaly stalk extending from the body. Pectoral and pelvic fins have articulations resembling those of tetrapod limbs. These fins evolved into legs of the first tetrapod land vertebrates, amphibians. They also possess two dorsal fins with separate bases, as opposed to the single dorsal fin of actinopterygians (ray-finned fishes). The braincase of sarcoptergygians primitively has a hinge line, but this is lost in tetrapods and lungfish. Many early sarcopts have a symmetrical tail.
Most taxonomists who subscribe to the cladistic approach include the grouping Tetrapoda within this group, which in turn consists of all species of four-limbed vertebrates.[2] The fin-limbs of sarcopterygiians show such a strong similarity to the expected ancestral form of tetrapod limbs that they have been universally considered the direct ancestors of tetrapods in the scientific literature. The crossopterygians apparently took two different lines of descent and are accordingly separated into two subclasses, the Rhipidistia (including the Dipnoi or lungfishes, and the Tetrapodomorpha which evolved into the Tetrapoda) and the Actinistia (coelacanths).
Sarcopterygians and their relatives the actinopterygians ("ray-finned fishes") are generally considered as forming the Osteichthyes super-class (the "bony fishes"), characterized by their bony skeleton rather than cartilage. There are otherwise vast differences in fin, respiratory, and circulatory structures between the Sarcopterygii and the Actinopterygii. The first sarcopterygians, found in the uppermost Silurian (ca 418 Ma), closely resembled the Acanthodians (the "spiny fishes", a taxon that went extinct at the end of the Paleozoic). In the early–middle Devonian (416 - 385 Ma), while the predatory placoderms dominated the seas, some sarcopterygians came into freshwater habitats.
In the Early Devonian (416 - 397 Ma), the sarcopterygians split into two main lineages — the coelacanths and the rhipidistians. The former never left the oceans and their heyday was the late Devonian and Carboniferous, from 385 to 299 Ma, as they were more common during those periods than in any other period in the Phanerozoic; coelacanths still live today in the oceans (genus Latimeria).
The Rhipidistians, whose ancestors probably lived in the oceans near the river mouths (estuaries), left the ocean world and migrated into freshwater habitats. They in turn split into two major groups : the lungfishes and the tetrapodomorphs. The lungfishes evolved the first proto-lungs and proto-limbs; they learned in the middle Devonian (397 - 385 Ma) how to live outside a water environment, using their stubby fins (proto-limbs) to walk on land and find new water if their waterhole was depleted, and their lungs to breathe air and get sufficient oxygen. The lungfishes' greatest diversity was in the Triassic period; today there are fewer than a dozen genera left.
The tetrapodomorphs, which included the gigantic rhizodonts, had the same general anatomy as the lungfishes, who were their closest kin, but they appear not to have left their water habitat until the late Devonian epoch (385 - 359 Ma), when they progressively transformed into tetrapods (four-legged vertebrates).
Non-tetrapod sarcopterygians continued until towards the end of Paleozoic era, suffering heavy losses during the Permian-Triassic extinction event (251 Ma).
The classification below follows Benton, 2004.
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Did you mean: lobe-finned fish, List of sarcopterygians
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