Athrodon is an extinct genus of marine pycnodontid fish that lived in shallow seas in what is now England, Germany, Spain and France from the Late Jurassic until the genus' extinction during the start of the late Cretaceous.[1] The various species are very similar in splenial bone and tooth morphology to the disused genus Mesodon. Otherwise, no articulated or complete specimen is known: all fossil specimens are bone fragments and disarticulated teeth. This genus is thought to be diagnosed by the presence of four lateral tooth rows. The presence of this genus in the Cretaceous is disputed, as the remains of Cretaceous species could belong to other genera.[2]
The following species are known:[1][2][3]
- A. boloniensis Sauvage, 1880 - Kimmeridgian of France (Boulogne)
- ?A. crassus Woodward, 1893 - Cenomanian of England (Cambridge Greensand)
- A. douvillei Sauvage, 1880 (type species) - late Tithonian of France (Boulogne)
- A. intermedius Woodward, 1893 - Berriasian of England (Purbeck Group)
- ?A. jessoni Woodward, 1895 - Cenomanian of England (Cambridge Greensand)
- ?A. profusidens (Cornuel, 1886) - Early Cretaceous of France
- A. wittei (Sauvage, 1880) - Kimmeridgian of northern Germany
The Late Cretaceous species A. tenuis Woodward, 1893 from the later Cretaceous of Belgium is more likely a specimen of Anomoeodus.[2]
See also
References
- ^ a b "PBDB". Paleobiology Database. Retrieved 2024-02-26.
- ^ a b c Kriwet, J. (2008-08-01). "The dentition of the enigmatic pycnodont fish, Athrodon wittei (Fricke, 1876) (Neopterygii, Pycnodontiformes; Late Jurassic; NW Germany)". Fossil Record. 11 (2): 61–66. doi:10.1002/mmng.200800002. ISSN 2193-0066.
- ^ Woodward, Arthur Smith (1895). Catalogue of the Fossil Fishes in the British Museum (Natural History). Taylor & Francis.
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