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Extinct genus of lamprey From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mesomyzon mengae is an extinct lamprey from freshwater strata of the Early Cretaceous-aged Yixian Formation, in China.[1]
Mesomyzon Temporal range: Early Cretaceous | |
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Fossil specimen of M. mengae | |
Life reconstruction of Mesomyzon mengae | |
Scientific classification | |
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Genus: | Mesomyzon Chang, Zhang & Miao 2006 |
Type species | |
Mesomyzon mengae Chang, Zhang & Miao 2006 |
The animal's exquisitely preserved fossils show a creature very similar to modern-day lampreys, having a well-developed sucking oral disk, a branchial basket, at least seven pairs of gill pouches and corresponding gill arches, impressions of gill filaments, and at least 80 myomeres of its musculature.[1] It had the same three phase life cycle found in modern lampreys.[2]
A phylogenetic analysis conducted in 2018 shows that Mesomyzon is the fossil lamprey most closely related to modern taxa, though it is not closely related to any modern group.[3] On the other hand, Brownstein & Near (2022) found it to be a member of the lamprey crown group, most closely related to Petromyzontidae.[4] However, a 2023 study found it again to be a derived stem lamprey, with the earlier Yanliaomyzon from the same region found to be more closely related to modern lampreys. This study also suggested Mesomyzon to be a blood feeder.[2]
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