Sclerorhynchoidei

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Comparison between a longnose sawshark (top and left), a Sclerorhynchus (middle), and a largetooth sawfish (bottom and right)

Sclerorhynchoidei, the sawskates, is an extinct suborder of cartilaginous fish that had long rostra with large denticles similar to sawfishes and sawsharks. This feature was just convergent evolution and their closest living relatives are actually skates.

The suborder contains five families, the Ganopristidae, Ischyrhizidae, Onchopristidae, Ptychotrygonidae, and Schizorhizidae. Some genera are not in any of these families.

Some genera[change | change source]

Onchopristis[change | change source]

Onchopristis is an extinct genus of giant sclerorhynchoid. Isolated rostral denticles are the most common fossils, but rostra, chondrocrania, jaws, oral teeth, vertebrae, and dermal denticles were also found.

Baharipristis[change | change source]

Baharipristis is an extinct genus of sawskate from the Cretaceous period.

Onchosaurus[change | change source]

Onchosaurus is an extinct genus of ganopristid sawskate.

Schizorhiza[change | change source]

Schizorhiza is an extinct genus of Cretaceous schizorhizid.

Onchopristis

Atlanticopristis[change | change source]

Atlanticopristis (meaning "Atlantic saw") is an extinct genus of Cretaceous ganopristid.

Related pages[change | change source]

Life restoration of the ganopristid Atlanticopristis

References[change | change source]

  1. Herman, J.; Van Waes, H. (2012). "Observations diverses et déductions concernant l'evolution et la systématique de quelques Euselachii, Neoselachii et Batoidei (Pisces - Elasmobranchii), actuels et fossiles"(PDF). Géominpal Belgica. 2 (1): 1–89. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-02-17.