Antarctaspidae is a potentially polyphyletic extinct family of basal arthrodires known from China, Antarctica, and Australia. The family lasted from the Early to Middle Devonian.[1]

Antarctaspidae
Temporal range: Pragian to Givetian, Pragian–Givetian
Life Restoration of the type genus, Antarctaspis mcmurdoensis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Placodermi
Order: Arthrodira
Suborder: Actinolepidoidei
Family: Antarctaspidae
White, 1968
Type genus
Antarctaspis
White, 1968
Genera

History of classification

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Antarctaspidae was erected in the description of the genus Antarctaspis based on the inference of a pair of central plates and extended nuchal plate that was later thought to be a paranuchal plate. In the later interpretation, the animal had no central plates which moved the animal to its own suborder being Antarctaspinae and placed it within the order Phyllolepida. Later genera assigned to the family would favor the original interpretation of the central plates.

The redescription of the genus Yujiangolepis suggested that the family was paraphyletic but potentially had a Chinese origin. Even with the condition of the family, a basal position within arthrodira was supported. More recent papers assign the family to the suborder 'Actinilepidoidei'. As of 2010, the family is defined by the unique combination of three traits which are seen one their own in other families within 'Actinilepidoidei'. These traits include a nuchal plate where the central and subpraorbital sensory canals converge (also seen in wuttagoonaspidae and some members of phyllolepidae), the contact of the rostropineal and nuchal plates (also seen in petalichthyidae), and the tubercular ornament (a basal feature of placoderms).[1]

Species

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Genus Species Age Location Notes Image
Antarctaspis[1][2][3] A. mcmurdoensis Middle Givetian Antarctica The genus is known from an incomplete skull roof that measures 70 mm long. Similar to Potangaspis, it had a fused rostropineal plate along with potentially lacking a mesial loop like other members of the family though this could just be do to the incompleteness of the front of the snout.
 
Potangaspis[1] P. parvoculatus Early Emsian China The genus is only known from an incomplete skull roof with orbits enclosed by the skull roof, similar to what is seen in macropetalichthids, petalichthyids, and antiarchs. Just like Antarctaspis, the animal had a fused rostropineal plate.
 
Toombalepis[4] T. tuberculata Between the Pragian and Eifelian. Australia The genus is known from both trunk plates and an incomplete skull with a more narrow skull than seen in the genus Antarctaspis. Toombalepis is a large member of the family with skull roof length of 190 mm.
Yujiangolepis[2] Y. liujingensis Pragian China The genus is known from a incomplete skull containing part of the neurocranium. The skull has a nuchal plate without any sensory line system, suggesting that it was a vestigial structure.

Description

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Skull

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Members of Antarctaspidae are generally small with wide, flat skulls measuring between 40 and 190 mm with orbits only being enclosed within the genus Potangaspis. The ornamentation seen on the skull of at least one genus, Toombalepis, shows individual variation. The animals would have had a long endolymphatic tube within the dermal bone, this trait being characteristic of arthrodires.[1][2][4]

Postcrania

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Within the family, the postcrania is only known from the genus Toombalepis. Based on what is seen from this material, the animal's anterior dorsolateral plate would have formed an ornamented spine similar to what is seen in Bryantolepis though it narrows towards the back. This plate also had a larger overlap range with the anterior dorsal plate than what is seen in comparable genera. The anterior lateral plate is similar to what is seen in Wuttagoonaspis, with the notches fusing in front of the pectoral notch to form ridges. Both the anterior lateral and potential parts of the ventral armor show course ornamentation for the size. The truck shield would have probably been much more vaulted indicating that the armor and skull roof wouldn't have been combined in life.[4]

Paleoecology

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Fossils of antarctaspids have been found in both freshwater and marine deposits indicating that they would have lived in a variety of environments.[4][1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Zhu, Min; Wang, Jun-Qing; Wang, Shi-Tao (2010). "A new antarctaspid arthrodire (placoderm fish) from the Lower Devonian of Guangxi, China". Vertebrata PalAsiatica. 48 (2).
  2. ^ a b c DUPRET, VINCENT; ZHU, MIN; WANG, JUN-QING (September 2009). "The morphology ofYujiangolepis liujingensis(Placodermi, Arthrodira) from the Pragian of Guangxi (south China) and its phylogenetic significance". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 157 (1): 70–82. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.2009.00519.x. ISSN 0024-4082.
  3. ^ Denison, Robert (1978). Placodermi. Handbook of paleoichthyology. Stuttgart New York: Fischer. ISBN 978-3-437-30265-7.
  4. ^ a b c d "Devonian fish remains from the Dulcie Sandstone and Cravens Peak Beds, Georgina Basin, central Australia | Western Australian Museum". museum.wa.gov.au. doi:10.18195/issn.0313-122x.65.2003.001-085. Retrieved 2024-11-21.