The Dermal Skeleton of Stem‐Actinopterygian Moythomasia durgaringa and Its Implications for the Nature of the Ancestral Osteichthyan
Xianren Shan, Edine Pape, Joseph N. Keating, Martin Rücklin, Davide Pisani, Philip C. J. Donoghue

TL;DR
This study examines the skin bones of an ancient fish to better understand the evolution of bony fish and their ancestors.
Contribution
The paper provides new insights into the dermal skeleton of Moythomasia, challenging current classifications of early bony fish.
Findings
Moythomasia's dermal skeleton has a three-layered structure with odontodes and lamellar bone.
Cosmine features evolved outside Rhipidistia, and true cosmine is limited to Dipnomorpha and Tetrapodomorpha.
The study suggests some fossils classified as stem-sarcopterygians may actually be stem-actinopterygians.
Abstract
The dermal skeleton is the most primitive component of the vertebrate mineralized skeleton, and features of its structure and development are key to resolving the evolutionary relationships of early vertebrates and bony fishes. In particular, the nature and phylogenetic distribution of cosmine, a dermal complex of hard tissue and vascular systems, have been the focus of debate over the nature of the ancestral osteichthyan and the timing of actinopterygian–sarcopterygian divergence. In large part, this controversy occurs because of a paucity of knowledge of the nature of the dermal skeleton in stem‐actinopterygians. Here, we describe the dermal skeletal histology of stem‐actinopterygian Moythomasia durgaringa using Scanning Electron Microscopy and Synchrotron Radiation X‐ray Tomographic Microscopy with a reconstruction of its topological variation and development. The dermal skeleton of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPaleontology and Evolutionary Biology · Ichthyology and Marine Biology · Fish biology, ecology, and behavior
