LOBEFIN
| common name for any of a group of lunged, fleshy-finned, bony fishes, also called crossopterygians, that were dominant in the Devonian period and gave rise to amphibians. They had heavy, ungainly bodies and stumpy paired fins, the precursors of the limbs of four-footed animals. Known from their fossils, the lobefins were thought to be extinct until 1938, when a live coelacanth was caught in deep water off S Africa. Since then other specimens have been discovered in the Madagascar area. The coelacanths are a marine branch of the lobefins. The coelacanth discovered in 1938, Latimeria chalumne, is a brown to steel-blue fish 5 ft (150 cm) long, with circular, overlapping scales, a laterally flattened three-lobed tail, a spiny dorsal fin, and a vestigial lung. It is the nearest living fish relative of the amphibians. In 1998 a closely related coelacanth, L. menadoensis, was discovered in Indonesia. Lobefins are classified in the phylum Chordata, subphylum Vertebrata, class Osteichthyes, order Crossopterygii. See lungfish. See S. Weinberg, A Fish Caught in Time (2000). ____________________The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved. -28535- | |
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