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American Zoologist 1991 31(1):93-110; doi:10.1093/icb/31.1.93
© 1991 by The Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology
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Evolution and Diversification of Antarctic Notothenioid Fishes1

JOSEPH T. EASTMAN
Department of Zoological and Biomedical Sciences, Ohio University Athens, Ohio 45701-2979

Antarctica supported fossil ichthyofaunas during the Devonian, Jurassic, Cretaceous and Eocene/Oligocene. These faunas are not ancestral to each other, nor are they related to any component of the modern fauna. About one hundred species of notothenioids dominate a modern fauna of over 200 species of bottom fishes. This highly endemic perciform suborder is not representedin the fossil record of Antarctica. Notothenioids may have evolved in situ on the margins of the Antarctic continent while gradually adapting to cooling conditions during the Tertiary. Cladistic studies indicate that notothenioids are a monophyletic group, but a sister group has not been identified among perciform fishes. With relatively few non-notothenioid fishes in Antarctic waters, notothenioids fill ecological roles normally occupied by taxonomically diverse fishes in temperate waters. There are six notothenioid families: Bovichtidae, Nototheniidae, Harpagiferidae, Artedidraconidae, Bathydraconidae and Channichthyidae. Aspects of theirbiology are briefly considered with emphasis on the Nototheniidae, the most speciose family. Evolutionary diversification within this family allows recognition of species which are pelagic, cryopelagic, benthopelagic and benthic.


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