176 SUB-CLASS GANOIDEI. 



Sub-order 2. CLADISTIA. 



Notochord more or less constricted and replaced by ossified vertebrae. 

 Baseosts in median fins rudimentary or absent ; axonosts of dorsal fins 

 equal in number to the apposed dermotrichia. Pectoral fins di- or tri- 

 basal. Nares on the upper surface of the snout. 



Fam. 7. Polypteridae. Body covered -with rhombic ganoid scales ; 

 vertebral column ossified ; tail diphycercal ; pectoral fins tribasal ; two 

 jugular plates only ; dorsal fins numerous ; pulp cavity of teeth simple. 

 Polypterus Geoffr. (Fig. 104), with pelvic fins, rivers of North and 

 Equatorial West Africa , Calamoichthys Smith, elongated and without 

 pelvic fins, rivers of Old Calabar and the Cameroons. 



Fio. 104. — Polypterus bichir (from C'laus). 



Older 3. Lepidostei. 



Body covered with rhombic or rhomhoidal scales arranged in 

 oblique rows and articulated together. Caudal fin hemi-hetero- 

 cercal. Vertebral column in the most different degrees of 

 ossification. Unpaired, and sometimes paired fins with fulcra. 

 Branchiostegal rays numerous, and often a median jugular plate 

 Always four opercular bones ; between preoperculum and orbit 

 at least one row of postorbitals. Infraclavicle absent. Somactids 

 of the unpaired fins as numerous as the dermotrichia. Teeth 

 pointed or conical. The pelvic fins are without baseosts. 



This order, which appears to be closely allied to the Palaeonis- 

 cidae on the one hand and to the Amioidei on the other, in- 

 cludes the living genus Lepidosteus. With the exception of 

 the Permian genus Acenfrophorus, the extinct members are 

 found in the Lias, Jurassic, Lower Cretaceous, and Tertiaries. 



The following remarks apply to the living Lepidosteidae. 

 The body is covered by rhombic scales articulated together 

 (see p. 177). The tail is hemi-heterocercal. The paired fins 

 are non-lobate, and all the fins bear paired fulcra. The jaws 

 are much elongated, forming a snout ; the premaxillae form most 

 of the upper jaw. Both jaws bear teeth, small and large, and 

 there are fine close-set teeth on the palatines and vomers. The 

 vertebrae are well developed and ossified, and have opisthocoelous 

 centra. The chondrocranium is large and cartilaginous witli 



