Basic info | Taxonomic history | Classification | Included Taxa |
Morphology | Ecology and taphonomy | External Literature Search | Age range and collections |
Pavarottia
Taxonomy
Pavarottia was named by Bannikov and Zorzin (2011).
It was assigned to Percoidei by Carnevale et al. (2014), Bannikov (2014) and Bannikov (2016).
It was assigned to Percoidei by Carnevale et al. (2014), Bannikov (2014) and Bannikov (2016).
Species
Synonymy list
Year | Name and author |
---|---|
2011 | Pavarottia Bannikov and Zorzin |
2014 | Pavarottia Bannikov p. 28 |
2014 | Pavarottia Carnevale et al. p. 44 |
2016 | Pavarottia Bannikov p. 6 |
Is something missing? Join the Paleobiology Database and enter the data
|
|
If no rank is listed, the taxon is considered an unranked clade in modern classifications. Ranks may be repeated or presented in the wrong order because authors working on different parts of the classification may disagree about how to rank taxa.
G. †Pavarottia Bannikov and Zorzin 2011
show all | hide all
†Pavarottia lonardonii Bannikov and Zorzin 2011
†Pavarottia maiseyi Bannikov 2016
Diagnosis
Reference | Diagnosis | |
---|---|---|
A. F. Bannikov 2016 | Body relatively deep, head rather large (head length 2.6 times in SL). Head length less than body depth. Supraoccipital crest thin and relatively low. Snout relatively short. Eye large, orbit diameter exceeds snout length. Mouth relatively wide, terminal. Ascending premaxillary process short. Jaw teeth small, conical. Lower jaw articulation at a level behind middle of orbit. Opercular region narrow. Vertebrae 28 (11 + 17); four posterior abdominal vertebrae with strong para- pophyses. Pleural ribs moderately long. Hypurals unfused. Two supraneurals. Dorsal fin single, relatively long-based; soft part being as long as spinous part or slightly shorter. Dorsal fin with 11 strong spines and 16 soft rays. First dorsal-fin pterygiophore precedes neural spine of second vertebra. Anal fin with three spines and 12 to 13 soft rays. Anal fin base of moder- ate length. Pectoral fins attached relatively low. Pelvic fins relatively long, situated below pectorals or slightly anteriorly. Caudal fin slightly concave, with 17 principal rays. Scales moderately large, evidently cycloid. |