Atlantitrygon

Atlantitrygon is an extinct genus of marine river stingray from the Paleogene period. It currently contains two species known only from isolated teeth. A. sudrei is known from the Thanetian-aged Gorgol formation of Niger and deposits of similar age in Togo and Senegal. It was originally ascribed to the genus Dasyatis.[1] A. senegalensis is found in the lower Lutetian Matam formation of Senegal and possibly the Ypresian sites of Tamaguilet, Mali and Ouled Abdoun, Morocco. It appears to be part of the River ray family and has been tentatively placed alongside the two extant marine species in the subfamily Styracurinae. However, this placement is uncertain.[2]

Atlantitrygon
Temporal range: Thanetian– Lutetian
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Chondrichthyes
Order: Myliobatiformes
Family: Potamotrygonidae
Subfamily: Styracurinae
Genus: Atlantitrygon
Sambou et al. 2020
Type species
Dasyatis sudrei
Cappetta, 1972

References

  1. Cappetta, H., 1972. Les poissons crétacés et tertiaires du bassin des Iullemmeden (République du Niger). Palaeovertebrata 5 (5), 179–251.
  2. SAMBOU, B.S. & HAUTIER, L. & SARR, R. & TABUCE, R. & LIHOREAU, F. & THIAM, M. & LEBRUN, R. & MARTIN, J.E. & CAPPETTA, H. & ADNET, S. (2020) Contribution to the reappraisal of the mid Paleogene ichtyofauna of Western Africa with three new enigmatical elasmobranchs from Thanetian–Lutetian of Senegal [Contribution à la réévaluation de l’ichtyofaune du Paléogène moyen en Afrique de l’Ouest avec trois nouveaux élasmobranches énigmatiques du Thanétien–Lutétien du Sénégal]. Annales De Paleontologie, 106 (3): 102400
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