Basic info Taxonomic history Classification Included Taxa
Morphology Ecology and taphonomy External Literature Search Age range and collections

Anenchelum glarisianum

Actinopteri - Scombriformes - Trichiuridae

Taxonomy
Anenchelum glarisianum was named by de Blainville (1818).

It was recombined as Lepidopus glarisianus by Pauca (1929), Danil'chenko (1960), Jerzmanska (1968) and Ciobanu (1977); it was recombined as Lepidopus glarisianum by Danil'chenko (1980).

Synonymy list
YearName and author
1818Anenchelum glarisianum de Blainville p. 314
1842Anenchelum glarisianum Agassiz figs. Pl 37, figs 1,2
1843Anenchelum glarisianum Agassiz p. 70
1929Lepidopus glarisianus Pauca p. 30
1960Lepidopus glarisianus Danil'chenko p. 150
1968Lepidopus glarisianus Jerzmanska p. 463
1977Lepidopus glarisianus Ciobanu p. 119
1980Lepidopus glarisianum Danil'chenko p. 150
2011Anenchelum glarisianum Monsch and Bannikov p. 266

Is something missing? Join the Paleobiology Database and enter the data

RankNameAuthor
kingdomAnimalia()
Bilateria
EubilateriaAx 1987
Deuterostomia
phylumChordataHaeckel 1874
subphylumVertebrata
superclassGnathostomata
Osteichthyes()
superclassActinopterygii()
classActinopteri()
subclassNeopterygii(Regan 1923)
Teleosteomorpha
Teleostei(Müller 1846)
Osteoglossocephalai
RankNameAuthor
ClupeocephalaPatterson and Rosen 1977
Euteleosteomorpha
NeoteleosteiRosen 1973
Eurypterygia(Rosen 1973)
Ctenosquamata
Acanthomorphata(Rosen 1973)
Euacanthomorphacea
Percomorphaceae
Scombrimorpharia
orderScombriformes
familyTrichiuridae
genusAnenchelumde Blainville 1818
speciesglarisianumde Blainville 1818

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.

Anenchelum glarisianum de Blainville 1818
show all | hide all
Diagnosis
ReferenceDiagnosis
K. A. Monsch and A. F. Bannikov 2011Vertebrae 108–120 (35–40+73–80). Dorsal fin with 98–104 rays, of which first ca. 40 spinous. Anal fin with 67–73 soft rays (of which the first ca. 45 are shortened and barely visible, but the beginning of the anal fin can be observed by its anterior spines).