Eusthenopteron
Eusthenopteron is an extinct genus of prehistoric marine lobe-finned fish known from several species that lived during the Late Devonian period, about 385 million years ago. It has attained an iconic status from its close relationship to tetrapods. Early depictions of animals of this genus show them emerging onto land, but paleontologists now think that Eusthenopteron species were strictly aquatic animals, though this is not completely known.
The genus was first described by J. F. Whiteaves in 1881, as part of a large collection of fishes from Miguasha, Quebec, Canada. Some 2,000 Eusthenopteron specimens have been collected from Miguasha, one of which was the object of intensely detailed study and several papers by paleoichthyologist Erik Jarvik between the 1940s and the 1990s. Further species have been described from other parts of Canada and northern Europe, indicating that this genus had a wide distribution.
Taxonomy
Eusthenopteron is placed in the family Tristichopteridae, which has also been alternatively named Eusthenopteridae after this genus. It is related to genera such as Tristichopterus and Eusthenodon.Eusthenopteron was widespread throughout what is now considered the Northern Hemisphere, and at least seven to eight species are known from Eurasia and North America. The following species list is based on Downs, Daeschler, Long & Shubin :
- †E. farloviensis White, 1961 - Frasnian of England
- †E. foordi Whiteaves, 1881 - Frasnian of Quebec, Canada. Named after Arthur Humphreys Foord.
- †E. jenkinsi Downs, Daeschler, Long & Shubin, 2018 - Frasnian of Nunavut, Canada. Named after Farish Jenkins.
- †E. kurshi Zupiņš, 2008 - late Givetian of Latvia
- †E. obruchevi Vorobyeva, 1977 - late Devonian of Latvia. Named after Vladimir Obruchev.
- †E. saevesoederberghi Jarvik, 1937 - Frasnian of Latvia. Named after Gunnar Säve-Söderbergh
- †E. traquairi Westoll, 1937 - Frasnian of Elgin, Scotland. Named after Ramsay Traquair.
- †E. wenjukowi - Frasnian of Leningrad Oblast, Russia
Description
Eusthenopteron is a medium- to large-sized tristichopterid. The species E. foordi is estimated to have exceeded in length, while the species E. jenkinsi probably reached. Eusthenopteron may have weighed around 50 kilograms.File:Eusthenopteron foordi.jpg|left|thumb|Eusthenopteron foordi, Escuminac Formation, Quebec. At the Royal [Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology].|223x223pxThe earliest known fossilized evidence of bone marrow has been found in Eusthenopteron, which may be the origin of bone marrow in tetrapods.
It may have eaten smaller fish.Eusthenopteron shares many unique features among fishes but in common with the earliest-known tetrapods. It shares a similar pattern of skull roofing bones with stem tetrapoda forms such as Ichthyostega and Acanthostega. Eusthenopteron, like other tetrapodomorph fishes, had internal nostrils, one of the defining traits of tetrapodomorphs, including tetrapods. It also had labyrinthodont teeth, characterized by infolded enamel, which characterizes all of the earliest known tetrapods as well.
Unlike the early tetrapods, Eusthenopteron did not have larval gills.
Anatomy
Like other fish-like sarcopterygians, Eusthenopteron possessed a two-part cranium, which hinged at mid-length along an intracranial joint. Eusthenopterons notoriety comes from the pattern of its fin endoskeleton, which bears a distinct humerus, ulna, and radius in the fore-fin and femur, tibia, and fibula in the pelvic fin. These appendicular long bones had epiphyseal growth plates that allowed substantial longitudinal growth through endochondral ossification, as in tetrapod long bones. These six appendicular bones also occur in tetrapods and are a synapomorphy of a large clade of sarcopterygians, possibly Tetrapodomorpha. Similarly, its elasmoid scales lack superficial odontodes composed of dentine and enamel; this loss appears to be a synapomorphy with more crownward tetrapodomorphs.Eusthenopteron differs significantly from some later Carboniferous tetrapods in the apparent absence of a recognized larval stage and a definitive metamorphosis. In even the smallest known specimen of Eusthenopteron foordi, with a length of, the lepidotrichia cover all of the fins, which does not happen until after metamorphosis in genera like Polydon. This might indicate that Eusthenopteron developed directly, with the hatchling already attaining the adult's general body form.File:Fishapods.svg|thumb|400px|In Late Devonian vertebrate speciation, descendants of pelagic lobe-finned fish—like Eusthenopteron—exhibited a sequence of adaptations:
- Panderichthys, suited to muddy shallows;
- Tiktaalik with limb-like fins that could take it onto land;
- Early tetrapods in weed-filled swamps, such as:
- Acanthostega which had feet with eight digits,
- Ichthyostega with limbs.