Crenolepis


Crenilepis is an extinct genus of prehistoric bony fish that lived in the seas of present-day Europe during the Anisian stage of the Middle Triassic epoch.

Taxonomy

Crenilepis was named by German paleontologist Wilhelm Dames in 1888 for a fragment of scales from the Middle Triassic Lower Keuper of Würzburg, Bavaria, southern Germany. The genus name was misspelt as "Crenolepis" by Carus, and some authors erroneously believed that Carus's misspelling was a replacement name for Crenilepis. However, Moser pointed out "Crenolepis" is a misspelling of Crenilepis because Carus cited Dames' 1888 work and just noted the genus as new. Strand claimed that Dames' genus was a junior homonym of "Crenilepis Reis, Sitz.-Ber. Akad. Wiss. München 1887, fasc. 1. p. 40, t. 5, f. 3 " and coined Crenilepoides as a replacement name. However, Moser showed that this citation was in error, as no known works by Otto Maria Reis dealt with Crenilepis and the Sitzungsberichte der Bayerischen Akademie der Wissenschaften 1887 contained no works by Reis at all, rendering Crenilepis technically valid and Crenilepoides an unnecessary replacement name.
The type species of Crenilepis is C. sandbergeri, Sun et al. considered the type specimen of C. sandbergeri lost and also undiagnostic, but Moser noted that the holotype is now in the collections of the Bayerische Staatssammlung für Paläontologie und Geologie in Munich.