Abstract
The phylogenetic relationships of the recently described genus †Ticinolepis from the Middle Triassic of the Monte San Giorgio are explored through cladistic analyses of the so far largest morphological dataset for fossil actinopterygians, including representatives of the crown-neopterygian clades Halecomorphi, Ginglymodi and Teleostei, and merging the characters from previously published systematic studies together with newly proposed characters. †Ticinolepis is retrieved as the most basal Ginglymodi and our results support the monophyly of Teleostei and Holostei, as well as Halecomorphi and Ginglymodi within the latter clade. The patterns of relationships within these clades mostly agree with those of previous studies, although a few important differences require future research. According to our results, ionoscopiforms are not monophyletic, caturids are not amiiforms and leptolepids and luisiellids form a monophyletic clade. Our phylogenetic hypothesis confirms the rapid radiation of the holostean clades Halecomorphi and Ginglymodi during the Early and Middle Triassic and the radiation of pholidophoriform teleosts during the Late Triassic. Crown-group Halecomorphi have an enormous ghost lineage throughout half of the Mesozoic, but ginglymodians and teleosts show a second radiation during the Early Jurassic. The crown-groups of Halecomorphi, Ginglymodi and Teleostei originated within parallel events of radiation during the Late Jurassic.
Highlights
The Neopterygii is the largest group of living vertebrates, including ca 32 650 valid species [1], the vast majority of which are teleosts
The investigation of the phylogenetic relationships of †Ticinolepis was performed through a parsimony analysis of a matrix of 339 morphological characters scored for 99 species (92 extinct and 7 living taxa)
The present study was designed and conducted to solve the phylogenetic relationships of the genus †Ticinolepis, including two species, †T. longaeva and †T. crassidens, which is retrieved as the most basal Ginglymodi. †Ticinolepis is known from the earliest to late Ladinian, while other more derived taxa are known from the Anisian, indicating a ghost lineage for this genus of at least 5 Ma at the base of Ginglymodi
Summary
The Neopterygii is the largest group of living vertebrates, including ca 32 650 valid species [1], the vast majority of which are teleosts. The origin of this important clade goes back to the Palaeozoic [2,3], but its most important radiation occurred in the early Mesozoic [3]. Ginglymodi, Halecomorphi and Teleostei are the three major clades currently recognized among crownneopterygians (Actinopterygii: Neopterygii).
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