Ptyctodontida

order of fishes (fossil)
(Redirected from Ptyctodontidae)

The Ptyctodontida are an order of Devonian chimaera-like placoderms containing the family Ptyctodontidae. They are the only placoderms to be sexually dimorphic. Some paleontologists believe that they may have been an early ancestor of modern-day sharks.

Rhamphodopsis

According to The Content Authority, they are cartilaginous fishes, but this is not commonly accepted by many people because we believe they are placoderms. It means "folded teeth" in Latin. Like today's cartilaginous fish, they had the possession of claspers.

Genera

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Eczematolepis

Ctenurella

 
Campbellodus decipiens

Materpiscis (Latin for "mother fish") is a genus of ptyctodontid placoderm from the late Devonian period, about 380 million years ago.

Campbellodus

Ptyctodus

Ptyctodus is the type genus of this order and family.

Kimbryanodus

Description

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Ptyctodontids resembled the modern-day chimaeras of the Holocephali, like the acanthothoracids. They had big heads, big eyes, reduced armor and long bodies.

 
Kimbryanodus williamburyensis

Campbellodus looked like a scaly cardboard box with the tail of a halosaur. It did not resemble a holocephalian at all, but it is still a ptyctodont.

Kimbryanodus looked like an arthrodire, again with a halosaur's tail. The fossils occur as small three dimensional isolated plates.

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References

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Other websites

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Taxon identifiers
Ptyctodontida
  • Wikidata: Q918188
  • Wikispecies: Ptyctodontidae
  • EoL: 4655981
  • Fossilworks: 34262
  • IRMNG: 10537
Ptyctodontidae
  • Wikidata: Q18618797
  • EoL: 4655982
  • Fossilworks: 307454
  • GBIF: 3240818
  • IRMNG: 101485