Gilliodus
| Gilliodus Temporal range: Carboniferous
| |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Chondrichthyes |
| Order: | †Eugeneodontiformes |
| Family: | †Eugeneodontidae |
| Genus: | †Gilliodus Zangerl, 1981 |
| Type species | |
| * †Gilliodus orvellei Zangerl, 1981
| |
| Other species | |
| |
Gilliodus is an extinct genus of eugeneodontid cartilaginous fish from the Carboniferous of North America. Two species, G. orvellei and G. peyeri, are known. The postcranial skeleton of the genus is indistinguishable in appearance to the distantly related caseodontid Caseodus, and the genus is differentiated by the anatomy of its teeth. An isolated tooth from the Late Devonian of Poland has been suggested to belong to Gilliodus, but later authors have concluded that this tooth more likely belonged to a different order of fishes.
Discovery and naming
Gilliodus is known from fossils of Late Carboniferous (Moscovian to Kasimovian) age, found in shales in the Midwestern United States. G. orvellei is known from Indiana, while G. peyeri is known from both Indiana and Nebraska.[1][2][3] The genus and both species were described in 1981 by paleontologist Rainer Zangerl. The genus name and the name of the type species honor Orville "Gillie" Gilpin, who was a fossil curator at the Field Museum of Natural History.[2]
Additional teeth from the Late Carboniferous of Colorado may have belonged to G. peyeri,[4] and a tooth from the Late Devonian of the Świętokrzyskie Mountains, Poland has been suggested to belong to the genus as well.[5] The Devonian tooth has since been reclassified as that of an unrelated fish in a different taxonomic order by Michal Ginter and coauthors.[1]
Description
The teeth of Gilliodus consisted of both rows of rectangular teeth along the lateral edges of the jaws, and a set of teeth along the midline of the lower jaw termed a tooth whorl. The lateral teeth differed in crown shape between the two species: in G. peyeri they were rectangular and blade-like, while in G. orvellei they were not bladed and came to a point. Both species are united by possessing rows of well-developed ridges on their lateral teeth. The teeth were composed of which were covered in an outer layer of enameloid. The lower jaws (Meckel's cartilages) of both species were not fused at their anterior end and had the tooth whorl positioned between them.[1][2]
The skeleton of Gilliodus was made up largely of calcified cartilage, although the dorsal fin and the vertebral column were uncalcified and are not preserved in fossils.[2] The postcranial skeleton of Gilliodus was identical in appearance to that of the caseodontid Caseodus.[1][2]
Classification
Gilliodus is a member of the order Eugeneodontiformes (originally spelled Eugeneodontida),[2] and more specifically the family Eugeneodontidae.[1][6] Rainer Zangerl considered the genus to be the sister taxon of Eugeneodus based on morphological analysis in his 1981 description of this family and order.[2]
| Eugeneodontida | |
| (=Eugeneodontiformes) |
Paleobiology
In life, Gilliodus were nektonic carnivores.[7] Based on the lack of wear to the enameloid coatings on its teeth, Zangerl suggested that Gilliodus had a rapid rate of tooth-replacement.[2]
References
- ^ a b c d e Ginter, Michał; Hampe, Oliver; Duffin, Christopher J. (2010). Handbook of paleoichthyology: teeth. München: F. Pfeil. pp. 122–123. ISBN 978-3-89937-116-1.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Zangerl, Rainer (1981). Chondrichthyes I: paleozoic Elasmobranchii. Handbook of paleoichthyology. Fischer. pp. 2, 74–91. ISBN 978-3-437-30337-1.
- ^ Bruner, John Clay; Bruner, John Clay; History, Field Museum of Natural (1992). A catalogue of type specimens of fossil fishes in the Field Museum of Natural History. Chicago, Ill: Field Museum of Natural History. p. 28. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.3361.
- ^ Itano, Wayne M.; Houck, Karen J.; Lockley, Martin G. (2012-08-01). "Systematics and occurrences of Edestus (Chondrichthyes) worldwide and new occurrences from Colorado and Texas". Historical Biology. 24 (4): 397–410. doi:10.1080/08912963.2012.658569. ISSN 0891-2963.
- ^ Liszkowski, Jerzy; Racki, Grzegorz (1993). "Ichthyoliths and deepening events in the Devonian carbonate platform of the Holy Cross Mountains" (PDF). Acta Palaeontologica Polonica. 37 (2–4): 407–426.
- ^ Nelson, Joseph S.; Grande, Terry; Wilson, Mark V. H. (2016). Fishes of the world (5th ed.). Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-119-22081-7.
- ^ "PBDB Taxon". paleobiodb.org. Retrieved 2025-06-07.