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Haikouichthys ercaicunensis
was an Early to Middle Cambrian, fish-like chordate dating from 535-520
mya, found in Yunnan, China. The name Haikouichthys means "fish from Haikou", a
town near the find site, with - ichthys "fish" [Gk], and ercaicunensis for the find site. The type specimen was reported by Luo et al. in 1999 as found in
the Ercaicun beds, near Haikou in the Yuansshan member of the
Qiongzhusi Formation in Yunnan Province. It is in the phylum
Chordata, the clade Craniata, the superclass Agnatha ("jawless"), and
the family Myllokunmingiidae. Haikouichthys
had a defined skull and other characteristics indicating it was a true
craniate, and possibly one of the earliest fishes. Cladistic analysis
indicates that the animal is probably a basal chordate or a basal
craniate. There is a prominent dorsal fin with fin radials similar, but
not comparable, to those of hagfish and lampreys. The body length is 2.5 cm (1 inch), with a distinct head and tail. Haikouichthys is narrower than the related Myllokunmingia,
another putative chordate from the same Cambrian beds. It has a distinct head and tail, with the head showing at least six
and perhaps nine probable gills. There are a number of muscle segments
(myomeres) with rear directed chevrons in the tail. There is probably a
notochord, with a short segment preserved in one specimen.
In the figure, the overall forms including backbones are shown of four specimens of Haikouichthys.
References: Luo et al. 1999
Shu et al. 2003. Head and backbone of the Early Cambrian vertebrate Haikouichthys. Nature 421, pp. 526-529. . |
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