Fish from the freshwater Lower Cretaceous, near Koonwarra, Victoria, Australia : with comments on the palaeo-environment
thesis
posted on 2016-12-05, 04:10authored byWaldman, Michael
Freshwater Lower Cretaceous sediments near Koonwarra, Victoria,
Australia, and the vertebrate fauna contained in them are described.
The evolutionary implications of the fish fauna are considered in
detail.
It is considered that the palaeo-environment was lacustrine or
paludal, and that periodic mass mortality occurred due to anoxic
winter conditions beneath an ice-cover ( "winterkill"). The graded
laminations present in the fish-bed are thought to be, at least in
part, of fairly regular origin and to be due to influxes of silt and
clay-laden floodwaters in successive spring seasons. Although such
laminae are generally only preserved in deep, cold lakes and wide-
spread aquatic arthropod fauna is characteristic of a shallow-water
environment today. The number and variety of terrestrial insects,
and the small size of the fish also indicates the proximity of shallow
waters.
The vertebrate fauna consists mainly of fish, although bird
feathers are known from the deposit. The discovery of fleas indicates
the probable presence of mammals.
Five families of fish are known from Koonwarra: Ceratodidae,
Coccolepididae, Archaeomaenidae, Koonwarriidae nov. and Leptolepididae.
The third and fourth families appear to be limited to Australia.
The Ceratodidae are known at Koonwarra from one very poorly preserved
specimen of parts of the axial skeleton and an associated skull
fragment of Ceratodus sp. The Coccolepididae are represented by
Coccolepis woodwardi sp. nov. and are generally small although one
fragmentary specimen indicates a ?coccolepid of large size. Coccolepids
are rare at Koonwarra. Only one archaeomaenid is known from
this site, Wadeichthys oxyops n. gen. et sp. nov. This seems to be
the most primitive archaeomaenid known, possessing enamelled scales
overall, no ossification in the notochord, an uncompacted caudal
skeleton, and most significantly, a pattern of preopercular pit-lines
and a sensory canal similar to those of some parasemionotids.
Koonwarria manifrons n. gen. et sp. nov. is derived from the
archaeomaenids, and is considered to have reached the teleostean grade
of organization. The caudal skeleton is compact and homoheterocercal,
with elongate urodermals and well formed hypurals. Its
scales are completely free of enamel and pit-lines have disappeared
from the preopercular and are greatly reduced on the parietal.
A new species of Leptolepis, L. koonwarri, is described and found
to be closely related to the Jurassic L. talbragarensis from New South
Wales. It may also have affinities with the Cretaceous L. diasii from
Brazil and Clupavus brodiei from the English Upper Jurassic. L.
'koonwarri is a mosaic form with "advanced" skull features (e.g. loss
of postorbital, few preopercular canal branches) whereas the axial and
caudal skeleton resemble L. coryphaenoides from the Lower Jurassic of
England.