February 4, 2013

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New materials of caturoid fish discovered in China

Gymnoichthys inopinatus Tintori et al., 2010, a new specimen (IVPP V 16354) and its line drawing. Credit: TAN Kai
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Gymnoichthys inopinatus Tintori et al., 2010, a new specimen (IVPP V 16354) and its line drawing. Credit: TAN Kai

In a newly published articles, researchers from the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology describe new materials of caturoid fish—Gymnoichthys inopinatus, from the Middle Triassic Guanling Formation at the Dawazi Village, Luoping County, Yunnan Province, China. Gymnoichthys inopinatus is not only the first caturoid found in China, but also the earliest caturoid in the world, which is 40 million years earlier than the European and North American caturoids. Researchers re-identified its systematic position and reported in the latest issue of Vertebrata PalAsiatica 2013(1).

Previously, caturoids were only discovered in the Jurassic of Europe and North America, and its recognized forms included Liodesmus, the only genera of the family Liodesmidae, and Caturus and Amblysemius of the family Caturidae. Gymnoichthys inopinatus was initially described by Tintori et al. in 2010, and regarded as a basal neopterygian.

G. inopinatus has only one supramaxilla and its symplectic is likely jointed with the articular, which are the identifying characters of Halecomorphi. Morever, G. inopinatus has no scales, its vertebral centra are not ossified, and the structure and relationship of the neural arches and neural , as well as the shape of teeth and ural haemal spines in G. inopinatus are quite like that of the caturoids. Hence, it is suggested to consider G. inopinatus as a basal form of the superfamily Caturoidea.

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