Cheirolepis
Cheirolepis is an extinct genus of marine and freshwater ray-finned fish that lived in the Devonian period of Europe and North America. It is the only genus yet known within the family Cheirolepididae and the order Cheirolepidiformes. It was among the most basal of the Devonian actinopterygians and is considered the first to possess the "standard" dermal cranial bones seen in later actinopterygians.
Cheirolepis was a predatory freshwater and estuarine animal about long. It had a streamlined body with small, triangular ganoid scales similar to those of the Acanthodii. These scales had a basic structure typical of many early osteichthyans, with a superficial of ganoine overlying dentine, and a basal plate of bone. Cheirolepis had well-developed fins which gave it speed and stability, and was probably an active predator. Based on the size of its eyes, it hunted by sight. Cheirolepis's jaws, lined with sharp teeth, could be opened very wide, allowing it to swallow prey two thirds of its own size.
Species
The following species are known:- C. aleshkai Plax, 2020 - Middle Devonian of Belarus
- C. bychovensis Plax, 2022 - Middle Devonian of Belarus
- C. canadensis Whiteaves, 1881 - Late Devonian of Miguasha, Canada
- C. gaugeri Gross, 1973 - Middle Devonian of Belarus & Estonia
- C. gracilis Gross, 1973 - Emsian & Eifelian of Belarus & Estonia
- C. jonesi Newman, Burrow, den Blaauwen & Giles, 2021 - Givetian of Spitsbergen, Svalbard
- C. trailli Agassiz, 1835 - Middle Devonian of Scotland
- C. schultzei Arratia & Cloutier, 2004 - Middle Devonian of Nevada, USA
The species C. sinualis from Belarus is considered a nomen nudum. The species C. cummingae Agassiz, 1845, C. macrocephalus M'Coy 1848, & C. uragus Agassiz, 1835 are considered conspecific with C. trailli''