Fish fossil from Cretaceous period
Prehistoric fish are various groups of
fishes that lived before recorded
history. A few, such as the coelacanth still exist today and
are considered living fossils.
The first fish and indeed the first vertebrates, were the
ostracoderms, which appeared in the Cambrian Period, about
510 million years ago, and became extinct at the end of the
Devonian, about 350 million years ago. Ostracoderms were
jawless fishes found mainly in fresh water. They were
covered with a bony armor or scales and were often less than
30 cm (1 ft) long. The ostracoderms are placed in the class
Agnatha along with the living jawless fishes, the lampreys and
hagfishes, which are believed to be descended from the
ostracoderms.
The first fish with jaws, the acanthodians, or spiny
sharks, appeared in the late Silurian, about 410 million
years ago, and became extinct before the end of the Permian,
about 250 million years ago. Acanthodians were generally
small sharklike fishes varying from toothless filter-feeders
to toothed predators. They were once often classified as an
order of the class Placodermi, another group of primitive
fishes, but recent authorities tend to place the
acanthodians in a class by themselves (class Acanthodii) or
even within the class of modern bony fishes, the
Osteichthyes. It is commonly believed that the acanthodians
and the modern bony fishes are related and that either the
acanthodians gave rise to the modern bony fishes or that
both groups share a common ancestor.
The
placoderms, another group of jawed fishes, appeared at the
beginning of the Devonian, about 395 million years ago, and
became extinct at the end of the Devonian or the beginning
of the Mississippian (Carboniferous), about 345 million
years ago. Detailed anatomical studies of fossil remains by
the Swedish scientist Erik Stensiö strongly suggest that the
placoderms were closely related to sharks. Placoderms were
typically small, flattened bottom-dwellers, however, many,
particularly the arthrodires, were active midwater
predators. Dunkleosteus was the largest and most famous of
these. The upper jaw was firmly fused to the skull, but
there was a hinge joint between the skull and the bony
plating of the trunk region. This allowed the upper part of
the head to be thrown back, and in arthrodires, this allowed
them to take larger bites.
The cartilaginous-skeleton
sharks and rays, class Chondrichthyes, which appeared about
370 million years ago in the middle Devonian, are generally believed to be descended from
the bony-skeleton placoderms. The cartilaginous skeletons
are considered to be a later development.
The modern bony fishes, class
Osteichthyes, appeared in the late Silurian or early
Devonian, about 395 million years ago. The early forms were
freshwater fishes, for no fossil remains of modern bony
fishes have been found in marine deposits older than
Triassic time, about 230 million years ago. The Osteichthyes
may have arisen from the acanthodians. A subclass of the
Osteichthyes, the ray-finned fishes (subclass Actinopterygii), became and have remained the dominant
group of fishes throughout the world. It was not the
ray-finned fishes, however, that led to the evolution of the
land vertebrates.
The ancestors of the land vertebrates are found among
another group of bony fishes called the Choanichthyes or
Sarcopterygii. Choanate fishes are characterized by internal
nostrils, fleshy fins called lobe fins, and cosmoid scales.
The choanate fishes appeared in the late Silurian or early
Devonian, more than 390 million years ago, and possibly
arose from the acanthodians. The choanate fishes include a
group known as the Crossopterygii, which has one living
representative, the coelacanth (Latimeria). During the
Devonian Period some crossopterygian fishes of the order (or
suborder) Rhipidistia crawled out of the water to become the
first tetrapods.
The story of vertebrate evolution started in the seas of
the
Cambrian period, when jawless, toothless, soft-bodied
fishlike creatures wriggled through the water, sucking up
microscopic food particles. Only after tough, non-decaying
bone was developed (initially as a scaly outer covering and
later within the body) did fossils form and become preserved
in the rocks. And only then could paleontologists take up the story with any certainty.
The earliest traces of bony scales are found in rocks of
the Late Cambrian period, and the first recognizable
vertebrate fish has been found in Australian rocks of Early
Ordovician age. So, the first chapter in the vertebrate
evolution starts with the ancient Arandaspis, a fish about
6in/15cm long with no jaws, no teeth and no fins other than
a tail. It did, however, have gills and a stiffening rod of
cartilaginous material (the notochord) that served as a backbone.
Groups of various prehistoric fishes include:
Late
Devonian vertebrate speciation saw lobe-finned
fish like Panderichthys having descendants such
as Eusthenopteron which could breathe air in
muddy shallows, then Tiktaalik whose limb-like
fins could take it onto land, preceding the
first tetrapods such as Acanthostega whose feet
had eight digits, and Ichthyostega with
developed limbs, negotiating weed-filled swamps.
Lobe-finned fish evolved into Coelacanth species which survive to this
day.
Jawless fish
- Arandaspis
Astraspis
Boreaspis
Dartmuthia
Doryaspis
Drepanaspis
Errivaspis
Haikouichthys
Hemicyclaspis
Jamoytius
Myllokunmingia
Pharyngolepis
Promissum
Pteraspis
Thelodus
Tremataspis
Cartilaginous fish
- Cladoselache
Cobelodus
Deltoptychius
Heliobatis
Hybodus
Ischyodus
Scapanorhynchus
Sclerorhynchus
Spathobathis
Stethacanthus
Tristychius
Xenacanthus
Sharks, acanthodians and
placoderms
- Acanthodes
Bothriolepis
Cladoselache
Climatius
Coccosteus
Ctenurella
Dunkleosteus
Gemuendina
Groenlandaspis
Megalodon or Megatooth shark
Mesacanthus
Ostracoderm
Palaeospondylus
Pterichthyodes
Squalicorax
Primitive ray-finned fish
- Aspidorhynchus
Canobius
Cheirolepis
Dapedium
Lepidotes
Moythomasia
Palaeoniscum
Perleidus
Platysomus
Pycnodus
Saurichthys
Semionotus
Modern ray-finned fish
- Berycopsis
Enchodus
Eobothus
Gryouchus
Gyrosteus
Hypsidoris
Hypsocormus
Knightia
Leptolepis
Pholidophorus
Protobrama
Sphenocephalus
Thrissops
Fleshy-lobed fish
- Chinlia
Dipnorhynchus
Dipterus
Eusthenopteron
Griphognathus
Gyroptychius
Holoptychius
Macropoma
Osteolepsis
Strunius
References
- Janvier, Philippe. Early Vertebrates Oxford,
New York: Oxford University Press, 1998.
ISBN 0-19-854047-7
- Long, John A. The Rise of Fishes: 500 Million
Years of Evolution Baltimore: The John Hopkins
University Press, 1996.
ISBN 0-8018-5438-5