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Historical Biology
An International Journal of Paleobiology
Volume 29, 2017 - Issue 7
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Articles

The relationships of Gasteroclupea branisai Signeux, 1964, a freshwater double-armored herring (Clupeomorpha, Ellimmichthyiformes) from the Late Cretaceous-Paleocene of South America

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Pages 904-917 | Received 26 Oct 2016, Accepted 14 Nov 2016, Published online: 02 Dec 2016
 

Abstract

The clupeomorph fish Gasteroclupea branisai Signeux, 1964 from the Late Cretaceous-Paleocene of El Molino Formation, Cayara locality, Bolivia is redescribed in detail. This South American double-armored herring is the sole member of the family Gasteroclupeidae and exhibits a unique combination of features (skull roof ornamented with fine tubercles, beryciform foramen, endopterygoid teeth, about 16–18 supraneurals, a series of 35–38 predorsal and 40 ventral scutes, median fins small and containing 12–14 rays) that clearly supports its assignment to the extinct clupeomorph order Ellimmichthyiformes. G. branisai shares a number of synapomorphies with Sorbinichthys elusivo and S. africanus (five hypurals, second hypural autogenous, distal end of the second uroneural not reaching the distal end of the first uroneural) with which it forms a monophyletic assemblage recognized herein for the first time as the new suborder Sorbinichthyoidei. The peculiar morphology of Gasteroclupea that is characterized by having an extremely deep abdominal profile, hypertrophied coracoid, and elongated pectoral fins, resembles in many aspects the body plan of extant freshwater hatchetfishes of the characiform family Gasteropelecidae, suggesting that the morphological adaptations of G. branisai can be related, at least in part, to a similar lifestyle.

Acknowledgements

We thank Gaël Clément (MNHN) for permission to examine material under his care and logistic support. Thanks are also due to Jocely Falconnet (MNHN) and Philippe Loubry (MNHN/CNRS, Paris) for the photographs of fossil specimens, and Prof. Adam Summers (University of Washington) for the permission to use the high-quality scan of Thoracocharax stellatus. The authors thank also Alison Murray (University of Alberta, Edmonton) and an anonymous reviewer for the valuable comments that improved the quality of the manuscript.

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