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Characoid fish teeth from Miocene deposits in the Cuenca Basin, Ecuador

Identifieur interne : 003A51 ( Istex/Corpus ); précédent : 003A50; suivant : 003A52

Characoid fish teeth from Miocene deposits in the Cuenca Basin, Ecuador

Auteurs : Tyson R. Roberts

Source :

RBID : ISTEX:766AE17DF524E9557A430BBE8ABEAFDEA1EA3194

English descriptors

Abstract

Miocene deposits from the Cuenca Basin in the Ecuadorean Andes (elevation 2360 to 2920m) yield teeth belonging to four of the 12 neotropical familes of characoid fishes: Erythrinidae, Characidae, Anostomidae, and Parodontidae. Previous characoid fossil records exist only for Characidae and Curimatidae. The erythrinid teeth are indistinguishable from those of Hoplias. Except for one tooth which belongs to Myleinae, the characid teeth are similar to those in many small to moderately large living members of the Tetra‐gonopterinae. The anostomid jaw teeth belong to Leporinus. Pharyngeal teeth of typical anostomid appearance are referred to Leporinus. The parodontid teeth cannot be identified to genus with certainty but may belong to Parodon. Parodontidae indicate a mountain stream habitat.

Url:
DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-7998.1975.tb01400.x

Links to Exploration step

ISTEX:766AE17DF524E9557A430BBE8ABEAFDEA1EA3194

Le document en format XML

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<p>Miocene deposits from the Cuenca Basin in the Ecuadorean Andes (elevation 2360 to 2920m) yield teeth belonging to four of the 12 neotropical familes of characoid fishes: Erythrinidae, Characidae, Anostomidae, and Parodontidae. Previous characoid fossil records exist only for Characidae and Curimatidae. The erythrinid teeth are indistinguishable from those of
<i>Hoplias.</i>
Except for one tooth which belongs to Myleinae, the characid teeth are similar to those in many small to moderately large living members of the Tetra‐gonopterinae. The anostomid jaw teeth belong to
<i>Leporinus.</i>
Pharyngeal teeth of typical anostomid appearance are referred to
<i>Leporinus.</i>
The parodontid teeth cannot be identified to genus with certainty but may belong to
<i>Parodon.</i>
Parodontidae indicate a mountain stream habitat.</p>
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<title>Characoid fish teeth from Miocene deposits in the Cuenca Basin, Ecuador</title>
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<namePart type="given">Tyson R.</namePart>
<namePart type="family">Roberts</namePart>
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<dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">1975-02</dateIssued>
<edition>Accepted 11 June 1974</edition>
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<abstract lang="en">Miocene deposits from the Cuenca Basin in the Ecuadorean Andes (elevation 2360 to 2920m) yield teeth belonging to four of the 12 neotropical familes of characoid fishes: Erythrinidae, Characidae, Anostomidae, and Parodontidae. Previous characoid fossil records exist only for Characidae and Curimatidae. The erythrinid teeth are indistinguishable from those of Hoplias. Except for one tooth which belongs to Myleinae, the characid teeth are similar to those in many small to moderately large living members of the Tetra‐gonopterinae. The anostomid jaw teeth belong to Leporinus. Pharyngeal teeth of typical anostomid appearance are referred to Leporinus. The parodontid teeth cannot be identified to genus with certainty but may belong to Parodon. Parodontidae indicate a mountain stream habitat.</abstract>
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<identifier type="ISSN">0952-8369</identifier>
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<identifier type="DOI">10.1111/(ISSN)1469-7998</identifier>
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<date>1975</date>
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<caption>vol.</caption>
<number>175</number>
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