Phoebeannaia mossae, Caron & Venkataraman & Tietjen & Fls, 2023

Caron, Abigail, Venkataraman, Vishruth, Tietjen, Kristen & Fls, Michael Coates, 2023, A fish for Phoebe: a new actinopterygian from the Upper Carboniferous Coal Measures of Saddleworth, Greater Manchester, UK, and a revision of Kansasiella eatoni, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 198, pp. 957-981 : 971

publication ID

C9E84BE-9AEB-4025-82FC-169C5ADBD5D2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C9E84BE-9AEB-4025-82FC-169C5ADBD5D2

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C687D1-FF91-301A-A11D-FC29FD1DB9F8

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Phoebeannaia mossae
status

 

Phoebeannaia mossae

The ethmoid region preserves details of the olfactory system, optic musculature and anterior palatal articulation. Given that most known Carboniferous actinopterygian fossils lack a preserved ethmoid region, it is notable that the morphology displayed by Phoebeannaia mossae does not closely resemble the complete ethmoid known from Kentuckia deani . Instead, it is more similar to incompletely recovered specimens of Lawrenciella schaefferi Poplin, 1984 ( Hamel & Poplin, 2008) and Kansasiella eatoni ( Poplin, 1974) . The olfactory tracts descend slightly as they progress anteriorly before passing separately though foramina in the postnasal wall (I; Fig. 11A, B). Above and lateral to the canal for the olfactory nerves, depressions mark the anterior dorsal myodome (a.d.myo; Fig. 11A, B); these depressions extend forward through a notch in the postnasal wall and might have allowed the musculature for the superior obliques to meet across the midline as suggested in Kansasiella ( Poplin, 1974) . The ventral anterior myodome (a. v.myo ; Figs 7A, B, 11A, B), located just below the olfactory tracts, appears as an indentation in the postnasal wall with two distinct depressions—likely origins for the inferior oblique muscles—and a dorsal midline passage that has been hypothesized to transmit the profundus nerve (V.pr; Fig. 11A, B) in the contemporaneous Lawrenciella schaefferi ( Hamel & Poplin, 2008) . Ventral to the ventral anterior myodome is a thin midline ridge (l.r; Fig. 7A, B) rising from the basisphenoid. The postnasal wall broadens ventrally and forms rectangular, posterolateral-facing processes for articulation with the palatoquadrate (eth.p.a; Figs 9A, 11B). The anterior surface of the postnasal wall supports two lateral depressions that form the posterior wall of the nasal capsules (p.n.w; Fig. 11A).

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