Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-19T05:38:04.305Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A new fossil species of Ictiobus (Teleostei: Catostomidae) from Pliocene lacustrine sediments near Tula de Allende, Hidalgo, Mexico

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 May 2016

Jesus Alvarado-Ortega
Affiliation:
Instituto de Geología, UNAM, Ciudad Universitaria, delegación Coyoacán, 04510 México, D.F.
O. Carranza-Castañeda
Affiliation:
Centro de Geociencias, UNAM, Campus Juriquilla, Querétaro, 76001 México, Querétaro
G. Alvarez-Reyes
Affiliation:
Instituto de Geología, UNAM, Ciudad Universitaria, delegación Coyoacán, 04510 México, D.F.

Abstract

A new fossil Ictiobus species is described, based on an abundant collection of well-preserved isolated bones found in lacustrine deposits of Pliocene (Blancan) age near Tula de Allende, state of Hidalgo, central Mexico. This fossil Ictiobus species shows the diagnostic character of the genus. In the palatine bone the ethmoid process is longer than the premaxillary process. Suspensorial pleural ribs with trapezoidal shape and a dentary bone with extremely short and wide gnathic ramus are the characters that support the creation of this new Ictiobus species. The fossil record of Ictiobus, the first known in Mexico, extends the paleogeographical distribution known of this genus, which had been previously restricted to the USA.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Paleontological Society 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alvarado-Ortega, J., and Carranza-Castañeda, O. 2002a. The fossil fishes from Pliocene localities near Tula de Allende, Hidalgo, México. Abstracts, 62nd Annual Meeting, Society of Vertebrate Paleontology. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 22(3 suppl.):32A.Google Scholar
Alvarado-Ortega, J., and Carranza-Castañeda, O. 2002b. Evidencias Fósiles de la Presencia de un Lago Durante el Plioceno en las Cercanías de Tula, Hidalgo. Abstracts. III Reunión Nacional de Ciencias de la Tierra, Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, México, p. 95.Google Scholar
Alvarado-Ortega, J., Espinosa-Arrubarrena, L., and Guzmán, A. F. 2002. La Historia Natural de los Peces, p. 106127. In González-González, A. H. and DeStéfano Farías, A. (eds.), Fósiles de México: Coahuila, Una Ventana a Través del Tiempo. Gobierno del Estado de Coahuila, México.Google Scholar
Arellano, A. R. V. 1951. The Becerra Formation (latest Pleistocene) of central Mexico. Internacional Geologic Congress Report, 18th Session, Great Britain, 1948, 2:5562.Google Scholar
Bleeker, P. 1864. Atlas Ichtyologique des Indes Orientales Néêrlandaises. Publie Sous les Auspices du Gouvernement Colonial Néèlandaises. Tome IV. Murènes, Synbranches, Leptocéphales. Amsterdam, p. 1150, pls. 145–193.Google Scholar
Branson, B. 1962. Comparative cephalic and appendicular osteology of the fish family Catostomidae, P. 1, Cycleptus elongates (Lesueur). The Southwestern Naturalist, 7(2):81153.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bryan, K. 1948. Los suelos complejos y fósiles de la altiplanicie de México en relación con los cambios climáticos. Boletín de la Sociedad Geológica Mexicana, 13:120.Google Scholar
Burr, B. M., and Mayden, R. L. 1992. Phylogenetics and North American freshwater fishes, p. 1875. In Mayden, R. L. (ed.), Systematics and Historical Ecology of North American Freshwater Fishes. Stanford University Press, Stanford, California, USA.Google Scholar
Carranza-Castañeda, O., and Miller, W. 2000. Selected Late Cenozoic vertebrate localities in the state of Hidalgo, and Guanajuato, central Mexico, p. 148. In Carranza-Castañeda, O. (ed.), Guide Book of the Field Trips of the 60th Annual Meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology, Mexico. Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Hidalgo, Avances en Investigación, Special Publication.Google Scholar
Carrasco-Hernández, J. 1999. Ignimbritas, Lahares y Colapsos de la Región de Taxhimay, del Sector Septentrional de la Sierra de Las Cruces. Unpublished , , 70 p.Google Scholar
Castillo-Cerón, J., Cabral-Perdomo, M. A., and Carranza-Castañeda, O. 1996. Vertebrados Fósiles del Estado de Hidalgo (Fossil Vertebrates from the State of Hidalgo). Universidad Autónoma del Estado de Hidalgo, México, 127 p.Google Scholar
Cavender, T. 1986. Review of the fossil history of North American freshwater fishes, p. 699724. In Hocutt, C. H. and Wiley, E. O. (eds.), The Zoogeography of North American freshwater fishes. John Wiley and Sons, New York, USA.Google Scholar
Chang, M. D., Chen, Y., Zhou, J., and Chen, P. 2001. Suckers (Fish, Catostomidae) from the Eocene of China account for the family's current disjunct distribution. Science in China, series D, 44:577586.Google Scholar
Cope, E. D. 1872. On the Tertiary coal and fossils of Osino, Nevada. Proceedings of American Philosophical Society, 12:478481.Google Scholar
Cope, E. D. 1885a. The Vertebrata of the Tertiary Formations of the West. Book 1. United States Geological Survey of the Territories, Washington DC, 1,009 p.Google Scholar
Cope, E. D. 1885b. Pliocene horses of southwestern Texas. American Naturalist, 19:12081209.Google Scholar
Cope, E. D. 1893. Fossil fishes from British Columbia. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 45:401402.Google Scholar
Eastman, J. T. 1977. The pharyngeal bones and teeth of catostomid fishes. The American Midland Naturalist, 97(1):6888.Google Scholar
Espinosa-Perez, H., Gaspar-Dillanes, M. T., and Fuentes-Mata, P. 1993. Listados Faunistico de México, 3. Los Peces Dulceacuícolas Mexicanos. Departamento de Zoología, Instituto de Biología UNAM, México, 99 p.Google Scholar
Etnier, D. A., and Starnes, W. C. 1993. The Fishes of Tennessee. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville, 681 p.Google Scholar
Ferris, S. D., and Whitt, G. S. 1978. Phylogeny of tetraploid catostomid fishes based on the loss of duplicate gene expression. Systematic Zoology, 27:189206.Google Scholar
Fries, C. Jr. 1962. Hoja Pachuca 14Q-e(11), Resumen de la Geología de la Hoja Pachuca, Estados de Hidalgo y México. Instituto de Geología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Carta Gerológica de México, serie 1:100,000, Map and Text.Google Scholar
Fuiman, L. A. 1985. Contributions of developmental characters to a phylogeny of catostomid fishes, with comments on heterochrony. Copeia, 1985:833846.Google Scholar
Gasca-Durán, C., and Reyes-Cortés, M. 1977. La cuenca Lacustre Plio–Pleistocénica de Tula-Zumpango. Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, Departamento de Prehistoria, México, Informes, 2:185.Google Scholar
Grande, L., Eastman, J. T., and Cavender, T. M. 1982. Amyzon gosiutensis, a new catostomid fish from Green River Formation. Copeia, 1982:523532.Google Scholar
Günther, A. 1868. Catalogue of the Physostomi, Containing the Families Heteroptygii, Cyprimidae, Gonorhynchidae, Hyodontidae, Osteoglossidae, Clupeidae, Chirocentridae, Alepocephalidae, Notopteridae, Halosauridae, in the Collection of British Museum. Catalogue of the Fishes in the British Museum, 7:i–xx, 1512.Google Scholar
Harris, P. M., and Mayden, R. L. 2001. Phylogenetic relationships of major clades of Catostomidae (Teleostei: Cypriniformes) as inferred from mitochondrial SSU and LSU rDNA sequences. Molecular Phylogeny and Evolution, 20:225237.Google Scholar
Lee, D. S., Gilbert, C. R., Hocutt, C. H., Jenkins, R. E., McAllister, D. E., and Stauffer, J. R. Jr. 1980. Atlas of North American Freshwater Fishes. North Carolina State Museum of Natural History, Raleigh, 867 p.Google Scholar
Lesueur, C. A. 1817. A new genus of fishes, of the order Abdominales, proposed under the name of Catostomus; and the characters of this genus, with those of its species, indicated. Journal of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, 1:8896,102–111.Google Scholar
Lorenzo, J. L. 1974. Sobre la fauna pleistocénica de Tequisquiac y los artefactos que se han encontrado en la misma región. Boletín del Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (2a época), 9:4146.Google Scholar
Lundberg, J. C. 1967. Pleistocene fishes of the Good Creek Formation, Texas. Copeia, 1967:453–445.Google Scholar
Meek, S. E. 1904. The fresh-water fishes of Mexico north of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. Field Columbian Museum, Zoological Series, 5:1252.Google Scholar
Miller, R. R. 1959. Origin and affinities of the freshwater fish fauna of western North America, p. 187222. In Hubbs, C. L. (ed.), Zoogeography. American Association Advance Symposium, 51.Google Scholar
Miller, R. R. 1986. Composition and derivation of the freshwater fish fauna of Mexico. Anales de la Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas, 30:121153.Google Scholar
Miller, R. R., and Smith, M. L. 1986. Origin and geography of the fishes of central Mexico, p. 487518. In Hocutt, C. H. and Wiley, E. O. (eds.), The Zoogeography of North American Freshwater Fishes. Wiley-Interscience, New York, USA.Google Scholar
Mooser, F. 1972. Informe Geológico de la Hidrografía del Norte de la Cuenca de México. Secretaría de Recursos Hidráulicos, D. F. México, 50 p.Google Scholar
Mooser, F., Montiel, A., and Zuñiga, A. 1996. Nuevo Mapa Geológico de las Cuencas de México, Toluca y Puebla: Estratigrafía, Tectónica Regional y Aspectos Geotérmicos. Comisión Federal de Electricidad, Primera Impresión, México, Atlas, 27 p.Google Scholar
Morgan, J. K., and Morgan, N. H. 1995. A new species of Capromeryx (Mammalia: Artiodactyla) from the Taunton Local Fauna of Washington, and the correlation with other Blancan faunas of Washington and Idaho. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, 15(19):160170.Google Scholar
Neff, N. A. 1975. Fishes of the Kannapolis local fauna (Pleistocene) of Ellsworth County, Kansas. University of Michigan, Museum of Paleontology, Papers on Paleontology, 12:143.Google Scholar
Nelson, G. J. 1994. Fishes of the World (third edition). John Wiley and Sons, New York, USA, 514 p.Google Scholar
Rafinesque, C. S. 1818. Further discoveries in natural history, made during a journey through the Western region of the United States. American Monthly Magazine, 3:445447.Google Scholar
Rafinesque, C. S. 1819. Prodrome de 70 nouveaux genres d'animaux décoverts dans l'intereur des États Unis d'Amérique Durant l'année 1818. Journal de Physique de Chimie et d'Histoire naturelle, Paris, 18:417429.Google Scholar
Rafinesque, C. S. 1820. Ichthyologia Ohiensis, or natural history of the fishes inhabiting the river Ohio and its tributary streams, preceded by a physical description of the Ohio and its branches. Western Review and Miscellaneous Magazine, 1819–1820 (Also by Hunt, W. G. H. Ictiological Ohioesis. Lexington, Kentucky, 99 p.)Google Scholar
Segerstrom, K. 1962. Geology of south-central Hidalgo and northeastern Mexico. Geological Survey Bulletin, 1104-C:87162.Google Scholar
Smith, G. R. 1963. A late Illinoian fish fauna from southwestern Kansas and its climatic significance. Copeia, 1962:505520.Google Scholar
Smith, G. R. 1966. Distribution and evolution of the North American catostomid fishes of the subgenus Pantosteus, genus Catostomus . University of Michigan, Museum of Zoology, Miscellaneous Publications, 129:1132.Google Scholar
Smith, G. R. 1981. Late Cenozoic freshwater fishes of North America. Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 12:163193.Google Scholar
Smith, G. R. 1992. Phylogeny and biogeography of the Catostomidae, freshwater fishes of North America and Asia, p. 778826. In Mayden, R. L. (ed.), Systematics and Historical Ecology of North American Freshwater Fishes. Stanford University Press, California, USA.Google Scholar
Smith, G. R., and Lundberg, J. G. 1972. The Sand Draw fish fauna. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, 148(1):1148.Google Scholar
Smith, M. L. 1980. The evolutionary and ecological history of the fish fauna of the Rio Lerma Basin, Mexico. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, 191 p.Google Scholar
Smith, M. L., Cavender, T., and Miller, R. R. 1975. Climatic and biogeographic significance of a fish fauna from the Late Pliocene-Early Pleistocene of the Lake Chapala Basin (Jalisco, Mexico). University of Michigan, Museum of Paleontology, Papers on Paleontology, 12:2938.Google Scholar
Stevenson, J. H. 1964. Fish farming experiment station. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Circular, 179:79100.Google Scholar
Sytchevskaya, E. K. 1986. Paleogene freshwater fish fauna of the USSR and Mongolia. Proceedings of the Joint Soviet-Mongolian Paleontological Expedition, 29:1157.Google Scholar
Tilesius, W. G. von. 1813. Iconum et descriptionum piscium Camtschaticorum continuatio tertia tentamen monographiae generis Agoni blochiani sistens. Memories of the Imperial Academy of Sciences and Arts of St. Petersburg (Academia Scientiarum Imperialis Petropolitana), 4(1981):406478.Google Scholar
Uyeno, T., and Miller, R. R. 1962. Late Pleistocene fishes from a Trinity River terrace, Texas. Copeia, 1962(2):338345.Google Scholar
Uyeno, T., and Smith, G. R. 1972. Tetraploid origin of the karyotype of catostomid fishes. Science, 175:644646.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Valenciennes, A. 1844. Sclerognathus cyprinella, nob., p. 477479. In Cuvier, G. and Valenciennes, A. (eds.), Histoire Naturelle des Poissons. Volume 17. xxiii + 497 + 2 p.Google Scholar
Walters, V. 1955. Fishes of western Arctic America and eastern Arctic Siberia. Bulletin of the America Museum of Natural History, 106(5):259368.Google Scholar
Wilson, M. V. H. 1977. Middle Eocene freshwater fishes from British Columbia. Royal Ontario Museum Life Science Contributions, 113:161.Google Scholar
Zeevaert, L. 1953. Outline on the stratigraphical and mechanical characteristics of the consolidated sedimentary deposits in the basis of the Valley of Mexico. IV Congress INQUA, Rome-Pisa, Italy, Abstracts, 2:976987.Google Scholar