Arganodus
Arganodus is an extinct genus of freshwater lungfish that had a wide global distribution throughout much of the Triassic period, with a single species surviving across Gondwana into the Cretaceous. It is the only member of the family Arganodontidae, although it is sometimes placed in the Ceratodontidae or synonymized with the genus Asiatoceratodus.
It was first named by Martin in 1979 based on fossils found at Tizi n'Maâchou in the Marrakesh area of Morocco, in rocks of the Timezgadiouine Formation belonging to the Argana Group.
Taxonomy
Arganodus contains the following species:- †A. atlantis Martin, 1979 - Carnian of Morocco and Algeria
- †A. dorotheae - Middle Norian of Texas and New Mexico, late Norian of Arizona
- †A. multicristatus - Late Olenekian of European Russia and Helgoland, possibly early Anisian of Poland
- †A. tiguidiensis - Late Jurassic of Algeria, Morocco & Uruguay ; Early Cretaceous of Niger, Algeria, and Brazil
Kemp placed Arganodus as a synonym of Asiatoceratodus, and this taxonomy has been followed by many other authors, although others still retain them as different genera and families.