Acentrophorus


Acentrophorus is an extinct genus of prehistoric freshwater and marine ray-finned fish from the Roadian to the Wuchiapingian of England, Germany, Italy and Russia '''. There may also be a Triassic occurrence in Australia.

Classification

The type species, Acentrophorus glaphyrus, was first described under the genus name "Palaeoniscus" by Louis Agassiz. Ramsay H. Traquair later erected a new genus for this species, Acentrophorus, to which he also referred the species "Palaeoniscus" abbsii, "P." altus and "P." varians. Some studies suggest that Archaeolepidotus, another very early holostean, may be a junior synonym of this genus.
Acentrophorus is considered to be the oldest known neopterygian, the group of ray-finned fish that encompasses the vast majority of extant species. It is often classified into its own family, Acentrophoridae. It is generally referred to the ginglymodian order Semionotiformes. However, the genus has been described as "enigmatic" and "pending restudy".

Species

The following species are known:
  • A. abbsii
  • A. altus
  • A. glaphyrus
  • A. robustus Brandt, 2021
The former species A. dispersus from the Late Carboniferous of the Czech Republic has been reclassified into Spinarichthys in the Aeduellidae. The former species "A. chicopensis" Newberry, 1888 from the Late Triassic/Early Jurassic Portland Formation of Massachusetts is both significantly younger than other members of the genus and has differing morphology, and it is thus no longer considered to belong to the genus.