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Stensioella

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Family
  
Stensioellidae

Phylum
  
Chordata

Class
  
Placodermi

Species
  
Stensiolla heintzi

Rank
  
Genus

Stensioella httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Order
  
Stensioellida Carroll, 1988

Similar
  
Brindabellaspis, Acanthothoraci, Rhenanida, Petalichthyida, Pseudopetalichthyida

Stensioella heintzi ("Heintz's Little Stensio") is an enigmatic placoderm of arcane affinity. It is only known from the Lower Devonian Hunsrück slates of Germany, where the only specimens have been found.

Contents

Anatomy

Stensioella heintzi has an elongated body, a whip-like tail, and long, wing-like pectoral fins. In life, the animal would have looked vaguely like an elongated ratfish. Like the sympatric Gemuendina, S. heintzi had armor made up of a complex mosaic of small, scale-like tubercles.

Taxonomy

Stensioella is tentatively placed within Placodermi as being among the most basal of all placoderms, as from what can be discerned from the only whole specimen found, the shoulder joints of its armor appear to be very similar to other placoderms. Despite this detail, coupled with superficial similarities in skull plates, and gross, superficial similarities between its tubercles, and the tubercles of the rhenanids, some paleontologists believe that there are very few concrete reasons for S. heintzi's placement in Placodermi. The paleontologist, Philippe Janvier [1] suggests that it was actually a holocephalid, and not a placoderm at all. However, if this is true, then the holocephalids (chimaeras, iniopterygians, petalodonts, et al.) diverged from sharks before the Chondrichthyan Devonian radiation.

Aside from a superficially similar bodyplan to primitive holocephalids like Menaspis, critics to Janvier's idea say that there is very little else in common S. heintzi has with holocephalids.

References

Stensioella Wikipedia