Maliamia
Maliamia | |
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Genus: | †Maliamia
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Species: | †M. gigas
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†Maliamia gigas Patterson and Longbottom, 1989
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Maliamia ("Malian bowfin") is an extinct genus of amiid ray-finned fish from the Early Eocene, known from fragmentary remains found in the Tamaguélelt Formation of Mali. It was described in 1989, based on fossils recovered by three separate expeditions in 1975, 1979-80, and 1981. The type species is Maliamia gigas, named in reference to its large size.[1]
Maliamia is currently the youngest known member of Vidalamiinae, an extinct group of bowfin fish that lived from the Early Cretaceous to the Early Eocene.[2]
Description
M. gigas is known from isolated jaw remains including premaxillae, vomers, maxillae, and dentaries. These fragments lack teeth due to post-mortem wear, but empty tooth sockets remain, and their arrangement implies that M. gigas had a single row of teeth. [1]
Estimates put the body length of M. gigas between 1.8 and 3.5 meters, making it the largest known member of Vidalamiinae.[3]
Paleoenvironment
Fossils of Maliamia are known from shallow marine phosphorites. During the Eocene, much of northwest Africa was covered by the Trans-Saharan Seaway, an inland sea estimated to have been approximately 50 meters deep. Global temperatures and the sea level were higher than they are today, and Maliamia lived in warm, tropical waters. Other fishes from its environment included Pycnodus jonesae, Lavocatodus giganteus, Cretalamna maroccana, Myliobatis wurnoensis, Stratodus apicalis, Nigerium tamaguelense, and Brychaetus sp. Additionally, it shared its environment with reptiles such as the dyrosaurid Rhabdognathus aslerensis, the turtle Acleistochelys maliensis, and the giant marine snake Palaeophis colossaeus which was, like Maliamia, among the biggest species in its clade. As sea levels rose and fell throughout the Late Cretaceous and early Paleogene, the Trans-Saharan Seaway of Mali experienced intermittent isolation from major seas, which may have made the ecosystem an aquatic center for endemism where organisms like Maliamia and Palaeophis were selected for gigantism.[3]
References
- ^ a b Patterson, C; Longbottom, A. E. (1989-12-27). "An Eocene Amiid Fish from Mali, West Africa". Copeia. 1989 (4): 827. doi:10.2307/1445965. ISSN 0045-8511.
- ^ Grande, G; Bemis, E (2014). "A comprehensive phylogenetic study of amiid fishes (Amiidae) based on comparative skeletal anatomy. An empirical search for interconnected patterns of natural history. (project)". MorphoBank datasets. Retrieved 2022-05-07.
- ^ a b O'Leary; Bouaré; Claeson; Heilbronn; Hill; McCartney; Sessa; Sissoko; Tapanila; Wheeler; Roberts (June 28, 2019). "Stratigraphy and Paleobiology of the Upper Cretaceous-Lower Paleogene Sediments from the Trans-Saharan Seaway in Mali". Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History.