Pucapampella
Pucapampella is an extinct genus of cartilaginous fish from the Middle Devonian of Bolivia and Peru. As currently defined it includes only the type species P. rodrigae, although it is possible several yet-unnamed species are represented under this name. Spine-like organs assigned to the genus Zamponiopteron may belong to Pucapampella, but the two are not known to be directly associated. Pucapampella is one of the earliest known cartilaginous fish, and is unique due to features of its skull and teeth.
Discovery and naming
Pucapampella rodrigae was described in 1986 by paleontologists Philippe Janvier and Mario Suárez-Riglos, based on three isolated skull fragments discovered in Bolivia. These remains are preserved in concretions and were initially identified as being from the Middle Devonian Sica Sica Formation and Huamampampa Formation, although they were not discovered in situ and are now thought to have originated from the older Early Devonian Belén Formation. A number of additional isolated skull fragments and a relatively complete braincase have subsequently been identified from Bolivia, including material from the Icla Formation. Later fossils discovered in phosphate nodules from the Chagrapi Formation of the Department of Puno, Peru have also been assigned to Pucamampella. An articulated skull and jaws from the Emsian-stage Gydo Formation of South Africa was described in 2001 and also tentatively assigned to the genus, although this specimen has since been reassigned to Gydoselache.The genus name honors the village of Pucapampa where the holotype specimen originated, and the species name, P. rodrigae, honors Gabriela Rodrigo who discovered the specimen.
Description
Pucapampella rodrigae is known from fossils of the cranium and jaws. Uniquely among cartilaginous fish, Pucapampella's teeth were skeletally attached to the palatoquadrates and Meckel's cartilages, rather than being attached by soft tissue like other members of the Class. The known skeleton of adult Pucapampella was covered in mineralized tessellations, a distinctive feature of Chondrichthyes, but these structures were apparently absent in juveniles. The cranium was divided into two unfused, transversely-aligned segments by a cranial fissure, another feature unique among cartilaginous fishes.Isolated fragments of postcranial cartilage are known from the same deposits as Pucapampella, although it is unclear if these belong to the same animal. These remains include several forms of plate-like structure assigned to the genus Zamponiopteron. Because these remains show no indication of tessellated cartilage, it has been questioned if they originated from a chondrichthyan at all.
In life, Pucapampella likely possessed well-developed subcephalic muscles which functioned to join the two segments of its neurocranium, similar to those of sarcopterygians, bichirs, and certain hexanchid sharks.