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Hexanchiformes

The Hexanchiformes /hɛkˈsæŋkɪfɔːrmz/ are the order consisting of the most primitive types of sharks,[a] and numbering just seven extant species. Fossil sharks that were apparently very similar to modern sevengill species are known from Jurassic specimens.[2]

Hexanchiformes
Temporal range: Early Jurassic–Recent [1] Possible Paleozoic record
Frilled shark, (Chlamydoselachus anguineus)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Chondrichthyes
Subclass: Elasmobranchii
Infraclass: Euselachii
Superorder: Selachimorpha
Order: Hexanchiformes
F. de Buen, 1926
Families

Crassodontidanidae
Mcmurdodontidae?
Orthacodontidae
Chlamydoselachidae
Hexanchidae

Hexanchiform sharks have only one dorsal fin, either six or seven gill slits, and no nictitating membrane in the eyes. Shark teeth similar to those modern hexanchids are known from Devonian deposits in Antarctica and Australia, as well as Permian deposits in Japan. If these are in fact hexanchids, this may be the only extant order of elasmobranchs to have survived after the Permian extinction (and by extension, the oldest extant order of elasmobranchs).

The frilled sharks of the genus Chlamydoselachus are very different from the cow sharks, and have been proposed to be moved to a distinct order, Chlamydoselachiformes.

Classification

Living species

Extinct species

 
Notidanodon sp. fossil at the Geological Museum, Copenhagen
  • Family Chlamydoselachidae
    • Chlamydoselachus Garman, 1884
      • Chlamydoselachus bracheri Pfeil, 1983
      • Chlamydoselachus fiedleri Pfeil, 1983
      • Chlamydoselachus garmani Welton, 1983
      • Chlamydoselachus goliath Antunes & Cappetta, 2002
      • Chlamydoselachus gracilis Antunes & Cappetta, 2002
      • Chlamydoselachus keyesi Mannering & Hiller, 2008
      • Chlamydoselachus landinii Carrillo-Briceño, Aguilera & Rodriguez, 2014
      • Chlamydoselachus lawleyi Davis, 1887
      • Chlamydoselachus tatere Consoli, 2008
      • Chlamydoselachus thomsoni Richter & Ward, 1990
      • Chlamydoselachus tobleri Leriche, 1929
  • Family Crassodontidanidae
    • Crassodontidanus Kriwet & Klug, 2011
      • Crassodontidanus serratus Fraas, 1855
      • Crassodontidanus wiedenrothi Thies, 1983
    • Notidanoides Maisey, 1986
      • Notidanoides muensteri Agassiz, 1843
    • Notidanus Cuvier, 1816
      • Notidanus amalthei Oppel, 1854
      • Notidanus atrox Ameghino, 1899
      • Notidanus intermedius Wagner, 1862
      • Notidanus nikitini Chabakov & Zonov, 1935
    • Pachyhexanchus Cappetta, 1990
      • Pachyhexanchus pockrandti Ward & Thies, 1987
  • Family Hexanchidae
    • Gladioserratus Underwood, Goswami, Prasad, Verma & Flynn, 2011
      • Gladioserratus aptiensis Pictet, 1864
      • Gladioserratus dentatus Guinot, Cappetta & Adnet, 2014
      • Gladioserratus magnus Underwood, Goswami, Prasad, Verma & Flynn, 2011
    • Heptranchias Rafinesque, 1810
      • Heptranchias ezoensis Applegate & Uyeno, 1968
      • Heptranchias howellii Reed, 1946
      • Heptranchias karagalensis Kozlov in Zhelezko & Kozlov, 1999
      • Heptranchias tenuidens Leriche, 1938
    • Hexanchus Rafinesque, 1810
      • Hexanchus agassizi Cappetta, 1976
      • Hexanchus andersoni Jordan, 1907
      • Hexanchus casieri Kozlov, 1999
      • Hexanchus collinsonae Ward, 1979
      • Hexanchus gracilis Davis, 1887
      • Hexanchus hookeri Ward, 1979
      • Hexanchus microdon Agassiz, 1843
      • Hexanchus tusbairicus Kozlov in Zhelezko & Kozlov, 1999
    • Notidanodon Cappetta, 1975
      • Notidanodon brotzeni Siverson, 1995
      • Notidanodon dentatus Woodward, 1886
      • Notidanodon lanceolatus Woodward, 1886
      • Notidanodon loozi Vincent, 1876
      • Notidanodon pectinatus Agassiz, 1843
    • Notorynchus Ayres, 1855
      • Notorynchus borealus Jordan & Hannibal, 1923
      • Notorynchus kempi Ward, 1979
      • Notorynchus lawleyi Cigala Fulgosi, 1983
      • Notorynchus primigenius Agassiz, 1843
      • Notorynchus serratissimus Agassiz, 1843
      • Notorynchus subrecurvus Oppenheimer, 1907
    • Pachyhexanchus Cappetta, 1990
      • Pachyhexanchus pockrandti Ward & Thies, 1987
    • Paraheptranchias Pfeil, 1981
      • Paraheptranchias repens Probst, 1879
    • Pseudonotidanus Underwood & Ward, 2004
      • Pseudonotidanus semirugosus Underwood & Ward, 2004
    • Welcommia Cappetta, 1990
    • Weltonia Ward, 1979
      • Weltonia ancistrodon Arambourg, 1952
      • Weltonia burnhamensis Ward, 1979
  • Family Mcmurdodontidae ?
    • Mcmurdodus White, 1968
      • Mcmurdodus featherensis White, 1968
      • Mcmurdodus whitei Turner, & Young, 1987
  • Family Orthacodontidae
    • Occitanodus Guinot, Cappetta & Adnet, 2014
      • Occitanodus sudrei Guinot, Cappetta & Adnet, 2014
    • Orthacodus Woodward, 1889
    • Sphenodus Agassiz, 1843
      • Sphenodus alpinus Gümbel, 1861
      • Sphenodus longidens Agassiz, 1843
      • Sphenodus lundgreni Davis, 1890
      • Sphenodus macer Quenstedt, 1852
      • Sphenodus nitidus Wagner, 1862
      • Sphenodus planus Agassiz, 1843
      • Sphenodus rectidens Emmons, 1858
      • Sphenodus robustidens Seguenza, 1900
      • Sphenodus tithonius Gemmellaro, 1871
      • Sphenodus virgai Gemmellaro, 1871

Species

Family Image Common name Genera Species Description
Chlamydoselachidae   Frilled sharks 1
extant
1
extinct
2
extant
12
extinct
Frilled sharks contain only two extant species of deepsea creatures which are typically weakened in areas closer to the surface. The most widely known species still surviving is the frilled shark, known as a living fossil, along with the Southern African frilled shark, found along coastal areas of South Africa. Several extinct species are known.
†Crassodontidanidae Crassodontidanidae 4 8 Extinct
Hexanchidae   Cow sharks 3
extant
5
extinct
5
extant
31
extinct
Cow sharks are considered the most primitive of all the sharks, because their skeletons resemble those of ancient extinct forms, with few modern adaptations. Their excretory and digestive systems are also unspecialised, suggesting that they may resemble those of primitive shark ancestors. Their most distinctive feature, however, is the presence of a sixth, and, in two genera, a seventh, gill slit, in addition to the five found in all other sharks.[5] They range from 1.4 metres (4.6 ft) to over 5.5 metres (18 ft) in adult body length.
†Mcmurdodontidae Mcmurdodontidae 1 2 Extinct
†Orthacodontidae Orthacodontidae 3 12 Extinct

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ The Chimaeras (Holocephali) are arguably more primitive than the Hexanchiformes, but arguably may not be sharks, depending on whether "sharks" are taken to be superorder Selachimorpha or instead class Chondrichthyes (all cartilaginous fish).

References

  1. ^ Froese, Rainer, and Daniel Pauly, eds. (2009). "Hexanchiformes" in FishBase. January 2009 version.
  2. ^ Allen, Thomas B. (1999). The Shark Almanac. New York: The Lyons Press. p. 45. ISBN 1-55821-582-4.
  3. ^ "New shark species confirmed: Genetic testing finds a different sixgill shark". ScienceDaily. Retrieved 2020-08-21.
  4. ^ "New species of shark discovered through genetic testing". phys.org. Retrieved 2020-08-21.
  5. ^ Matt's, J. & Last P.R. (1998). Paxton, J.R. & Eschmeyer, W.N. (eds.). Encyclopedia of Fishes. San Diego: Academic Press. p. 61. ISBN 0-12-547665-5.

External links

  • Froese, Rainer, and Daniel Pauly, eds. (2011). "Chlamydoselachidae" in FishBase. February 2011 version. (Fish Base family reference)
  • Froese, Rainer, and Daniel Pauly, eds. (2011). "Hexanchidae" in FishBase. February 2011 version. (Fish Base family reference)

hexanchiformes, ɔːr, order, consisting, most, primitive, types, sharks, numbering, just, seven, extant, species, fossil, sharks, that, were, apparently, very, similar, modern, sevengill, species, known, from, jurassic, specimens, temporal, range, early, jurass. The Hexanchiformes h ɛ k ˈ s ae ŋ k ɪ f ɔːr m iː z are the order consisting of the most primitive types of sharks a and numbering just seven extant species Fossil sharks that were apparently very similar to modern sevengill species are known from Jurassic specimens 2 HexanchiformesTemporal range Early Jurassic Recent PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N 1 Possible Paleozoic recordFrilled shark Chlamydoselachus anguineus Scientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass ChondrichthyesSubclass ElasmobranchiiInfraclass EuselachiiSuperorder SelachimorphaOrder HexanchiformesF de Buen 1926Families Crassodontidanidae Mcmurdodontidae OrthacodontidaeChlamydoselachidaeHexanchidaeHexanchiform sharks have only one dorsal fin either six or seven gill slits and no nictitating membrane in the eyes Shark teeth similar to those modern hexanchids are known from Devonian deposits in Antarctica and Australia as well as Permian deposits in Japan If these are in fact hexanchids this may be the only extant order of elasmobranchs to have survived after the Permian extinction and by extension the oldest extant order of elasmobranchs The frilled sharks of the genus Chlamydoselachus are very different from the cow sharks and have been proposed to be moved to a distinct order Chlamydoselachiformes Contents 1 Classification 1 1 Living species 1 2 Extinct species 2 Species 3 See also 4 Footnotes 5 References 6 External linksClassification EditLiving species Edit Family Chlamydoselachidae Garman 1884 frilled sharks Chlamydoselachus Garman 1884 Chlamydoselachus africana Ebert amp Compagno 2009 Southern African frilled shark Chlamydoselachus anguineus Garman 1884 frilled shark Family Hexanchidae J E Gray 1851 cow sharks Heptranchias Rafinesque 1810 Heptranchias perlo Bonnaterre 1788 sharpnose sevengill shark Hexanchus Rafinesque 1810 Hexanchus griseus Bonnaterre 1788 bluntnose sixgill shark Hexanchus nakamurai Teng 1962 bigeyed sixgill shark Hexanchus vitulusDaly Engel 2018 Atlantic sixgill shark 3 4 Notorynchus Ayres 1855 Notorynchus cepedianus Peron 1807 broadnose sevengill shark Extinct species Edit Notidanodon sp fossil at the Geological Museum Copenhagen Family Chlamydoselachidae Chlamydoselachus Garman 1884 Chlamydoselachus bracheri Pfeil 1983 Chlamydoselachus fiedleri Pfeil 1983 Chlamydoselachus garmani Welton 1983 Chlamydoselachus goliath Antunes amp Cappetta 2002 Chlamydoselachus gracilis Antunes amp Cappetta 2002 Chlamydoselachus keyesi Mannering amp Hiller 2008 Chlamydoselachus landinii Carrillo Briceno Aguilera amp Rodriguez 2014 Chlamydoselachus lawleyi Davis 1887 Chlamydoselachus tatere Consoli 2008 Chlamydoselachus thomsoni Richter amp Ward 1990 Chlamydoselachus tobleri Leriche 1929 Family Crassodontidanidae Crassodontidanus Kriwet amp Klug 2011 Crassodontidanus serratus Fraas 1855 Crassodontidanus wiedenrothi Thies 1983 Notidanoides Maisey 1986 Notidanoides muensteri Agassiz 1843 Notidanus Cuvier 1816 Notidanus amalthei Oppel 1854 Notidanus atrox Ameghino 1899 Notidanus intermedius Wagner 1862 Notidanus nikitini Chabakov amp Zonov 1935 Pachyhexanchus Cappetta 1990 Pachyhexanchus pockrandti Ward amp Thies 1987 Family Hexanchidae Gladioserratus Underwood Goswami Prasad Verma amp Flynn 2011 Gladioserratus aptiensis Pictet 1864 Gladioserratus dentatus Guinot Cappetta amp Adnet 2014 Gladioserratus magnus Underwood Goswami Prasad Verma amp Flynn 2011 Heptranchias Rafinesque 1810 Heptranchias ezoensis Applegate amp Uyeno 1968 Heptranchias howellii Reed 1946 Heptranchias karagalensis Kozlov in Zhelezko amp Kozlov 1999 Heptranchias tenuidens Leriche 1938 Hexanchus Rafinesque 1810 Hexanchus agassizi Cappetta 1976 Hexanchus andersoni Jordan 1907 Hexanchus casieri Kozlov 1999 Hexanchus collinsonae Ward 1979 Hexanchus gracilis Davis 1887 Hexanchus hookeri Ward 1979 Hexanchus microdon Agassiz 1843 Hexanchus tusbairicus Kozlov in Zhelezko amp Kozlov 1999 Notidanodon Cappetta 1975 Notidanodon brotzeni Siverson 1995 Notidanodon dentatus Woodward 1886 Notidanodon lanceolatus Woodward 1886 Notidanodon loozi Vincent 1876 Notidanodon pectinatus Agassiz 1843 Notorynchus Ayres 1855 Notorynchus borealus Jordan amp Hannibal 1923 Notorynchus kempi Ward 1979 Notorynchus lawleyi Cigala Fulgosi 1983 Notorynchus primigenius Agassiz 1843 Notorynchus serratissimus Agassiz 1843 Notorynchus subrecurvus Oppenheimer 1907 Pachyhexanchus Cappetta 1990 Pachyhexanchus pockrandti Ward amp Thies 1987 Paraheptranchias Pfeil 1981 Paraheptranchias repens Probst 1879 Pseudonotidanus Underwood amp Ward 2004 Pseudonotidanus semirugosus Underwood amp Ward 2004 Welcommia Cappetta 1990 Welcommia bodeuri Cappetta 1990 Welcommia cappettai Klug amp Kriwet 2010 Weltonia Ward 1979 Weltonia ancistrodon Arambourg 1952 Weltonia burnhamensis Ward 1979 Family Mcmurdodontidae Mcmurdodus White 1968 Mcmurdodus featherensis White 1968 Mcmurdodus whitei Turner amp Young 1987 Family Orthacodontidae Occitanodus Guinot Cappetta amp Adnet 2014 Occitanodus sudrei Guinot Cappetta amp Adnet 2014 Orthacodus Woodward 1889 Orthacodus longidens Agassiz 1843 Sphenodus Agassiz 1843 Sphenodus alpinus Gumbel 1861 Sphenodus longidens Agassiz 1843 Sphenodus lundgreni Davis 1890 Sphenodus macer Quenstedt 1852 Sphenodus nitidus Wagner 1862 Sphenodus planus Agassiz 1843 Sphenodus rectidens Emmons 1858 Sphenodus robustidens Seguenza 1900 Sphenodus tithonius Gemmellaro 1871 Sphenodus virgai Gemmellaro 1871Species EditFamily Image Common name Genera Species DescriptionChlamydoselachidae Frilled sharks 1extant1extinct 2extant12extinct Frilled sharks contain only two extant species of deepsea creatures which are typically weakened in areas closer to the surface The most widely known species still surviving is the frilled shark known as a living fossil along with the Southern African frilled shark found along coastal areas of South Africa Several extinct species are known Crassodontidanidae Crassodontidanidae 4 8 ExtinctHexanchidae Cow sharks 3extant5extinct 5extant31extinct Cow sharks are considered the most primitive of all the sharks because their skeletons resemble those of ancient extinct forms with few modern adaptations Their excretory and digestive systems are also unspecialised suggesting that they may resemble those of primitive shark ancestors Their most distinctive feature however is the presence of a sixth and in two genera a seventh gill slit in addition to the five found in all other sharks 5 They range from 1 4 metres 4 6 ft to over 5 5 metres 18 ft in adult body length Mcmurdodontidae Mcmurdodontidae 1 2 Extinct Orthacodontidae Orthacodontidae 3 12 ExtinctSee also Edit Sharks portal Time range of Hexanchiformes speciesFootnotes Edit The Chimaeras Holocephali are arguably more primitive than the Hexanchiformes but arguably may not be sharks depending on whether sharks are taken to be superorder Selachimorpha or instead class Chondrichthyes all cartilaginous fish References Edit Froese Rainer and Daniel Pauly eds 2009 Hexanchiformes in FishBase January 2009 version Allen Thomas B 1999 The Shark Almanac New York The Lyons Press p 45 ISBN 1 55821 582 4 New shark species confirmed Genetic testing finds a different sixgill shark ScienceDaily Retrieved 2020 08 21 New species of shark discovered through genetic testing phys org Retrieved 2020 08 21 Matt s J amp Last P R 1998 Paxton J R amp Eschmeyer W N eds Encyclopedia of Fishes San Diego Academic Press p 61 ISBN 0 12 547665 5 External links EditFroese Rainer and Daniel Pauly eds 2011 Chlamydoselachidae in FishBase February 2011 version Fish Base family reference Froese Rainer and Daniel Pauly eds 2011 Hexanchidae in FishBase February 2011 version Fish Base family reference Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hexanchiformes amp oldid 1121180028, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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