Argentinidae Explained
The herring smelts or argentines are a family, Argentinidae, of marine smelts. They are similar in appearance to smelts (family Osmeridae) but have much smaller mouths. They are found in oceans throughout the world. They are small fishes, growing up to long, except the greater argentine, Argentina silus, which reaches .
They form large schools close to the sea floor, and feed on plankton, especially krill, amphipods, small cephalopods, chaetognaths, and ctenophores.
Several species are fished commercially and processed into fish meal.
The earliest fossil argentinid remains are indeterminate otoliths from the Barremian Kimigahama Formation of Japan. The presence of these fossils in what is thought to have been a shallow-water environment contrasts with the present occurrence of argentinids in deepwater habitats, suggesting that they must have adapted to deep-sea environments later in the Cretaceous. [1] Otoliths assignable to Argentina are known from the Late Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) of the United States and Germany.[2] [3] [4]
References
- Miyata . Shinya . Isaji . Shinji . Kashiwagi . Kenji . Asai . Hidehiko . 2024-04-04 . The first record of Lower Cretaceous otoliths from the Kimigahama Formation (Barremian) of the Choshi Group, Chiba Prefecture, Japan . Palaeontologia Electronica . English . 27 . 1 . 1–23 . 10.26879/1318 . 1094-8074. free .
- Near . Thomas J . Thacker . Christine E . 18 April 2024 . Phylogenetic classification of living and fossil ray-finned fishes (Actinopterygii) . Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History . 65 . 10.3374/014.065.0101 . free.
- Stringer . Gary . Schwarzhans . Werner . 2021-09-01 . Upper Cretaceous teleostean otoliths from the Severn Formation (Maastrichtian) of Maryland, USA, with an unusual occurrence of Siluriformes and Beryciformes and the oldest Atlantic coast Gadiformes . Cretaceous Research . 125 . 104867 . 10.1016/j.cretres.2021.104867 . 0195-6671. free .
- Schwarzhans . Werner W. . Jagt . John W. M. . 2021-11-01 . Silicified otoliths from the Maastrichtian type area (Netherlands, Belgium) document early gadiform and perciform fishes during the Late Cretaceous, prior to the K/Pg boundary extinction event . Cretaceous Research . 127 . 104921 . 10.1016/j.cretres.2021.104921 . 0195-6671. free .