Coelacanthus
Appearance
Coelacanthus | |
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Coelacanthus whitea | |
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Genus: | Coelacanthus Agassiz, 1836
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Coelacanthus ("Hollow Spine") is a genus of extinct coelacanths that first appeared during the Permian period. In fact, this was the first genus of coelacanths ever described, as the order Coelacanthiformes is named after it.
They bear a superficial similarity to the living Latimeria, though they were smaller, and had more elongated heads. Individuals grew up to 3 feet in length, and had small lobed fins, suggesting that Coelacanthus were open-water predators.
Coelacanthus was a long-lived genus with a worldwide distribution. The various species survived the Permian–Triassic extinction event, and the last eventually died out during the Late Jurassic, around 145 million years ago.
Species of Coelacanthus
- Coelacanthus banffensis Lambe, 1916
- Coelacanthus evolutus Beltan, 1980
- Coelacanthus gracilis Agassiz, 1844,
- Coelacanthus granulatus Agassiz, 1836
- Coelacanthus harlemensis Winkler, 1871
- Coelacanthus lunzensis Reis, 1900
- Coelacanthus madagascariensis Woodward, 1910
- Coelacanthus minor Agassiz, 1844
- Coelacanthus welleri Eastman, 1908
- Coelacanthus whitea Lehman, 1952
External links
Categories:
- Coelacanthidae
- Prehistoric bony fish genera
- Permian fish
- Triassic fish
- Jurassic fish
- Jurassic extinctions
- Prehistoric fish of Asia
- Prehistoric fish of Africa
- Prehistoric fish of Europe
- Prehistoric fish of North America
- Prehistoric fish of South America
- Prehistoric fish of Australia
- Extinct animals of Antarctica
- Triassic fish stubs
- Prehistoric lobe-finned fish stubs