Ecrinesomus Explained

Ecrinesomus is an extinct genus of prehistoric bobasatraniiform ray-finned fish that lived during the Induan age of the Early Triassic epoch in what is now Madagascar.[1]

Appearance

Ecrinesomus co-occurred with the relatively similar looking Bobasatrania. Fossils of these two genera are sometimes misidentified, but can be distinguished based on the following characters: the number of scale rows (Ecrinesomus has ca. 48 transversal scale rows, Bobasatrania has fewer), the body shape (Ecrinesomus has an elliptical, Bobasatrania a rhombic body outline) and the distinct skull bone pattern.[2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Sepkoski . Jack . A compendium of fossil marine animal genera . Bulletins of American Paleontology . 364 . 560 . 2002 . 2009-02-27 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110723131237/http://strata.ummp.lsa.umich.edu/jack/showgenera.php?taxon=611&rank=class . 2011-07-23 .
  2. Lehman . Jean-Pierre . Jean-Pierre Lehman . 1956 . Compléments à l’étude des genres Ecrinesomus et Bobasatrania de l’Eotrias de Madagascar . Annales de Paléontologie . 42 . 67–94 . fr. .