Abbreviated CladogramTELEOSTOMI |--NEOPTERYGII `--Sarcopterygii |--+--Onychodontiformes | `--Actinistia `--Rhipidistia |--Dipnomorpha `--+--Rhizodontiformes `--Osteolepiformes |--Tristichopteridae `--Elpistostegalia |--Panderichthys `--TETRAPODA |
Contents140.000 Overview |
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Holoptychius - late Devonian period |
There are traditionally three main groups of Sarcopterygii, the Crossopterygia (no longer regarded as a valid taxon), the Coelocanths, once an important group but now limited to a single large deepwater genus, and the lungfish (Dipnoi), which are capable of breathing air and surviving out of water. In fact all sarcopterygians have lungs of some sort, as do even primitive Actinopterygia and some Placoderms. Air-breathing in fish is, in fact, a primitive character of all osteichthyans.
Sarcopterygii are also distinguished by a dermal or external (scaly) skeleton characterized by the shiny dermal tissue cosmine, a feature secondarily lost in all advanced lineages, and by the presence of unique tooth materials, such as enameloid on the teeth of predatory forms, and mineralized dentines, such as petrodentine, in the toothplate and denticles of lungfishes.

Here is a double cladogram of Sarcopterygian interrelationships, from Janvier (1996). The right and left side summarize two rival interpretations (and there are others). The left-hand side is one of the fully resolved cladograms, essentially from Ahlberg (1991a), which we follow here.
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Terminal taxa:A, Onychodontiformes - early to late DevonianB, Actinistia - middle Devonian to Recent C, Dipnoi - late Silurian or early Devonian to Recent D, Porolepiformes - early to late Devonian E Rhizodontiformes - late Devonian to Carboniferous F. Osteolepiformes - middle Devonian to early Permian G. Panderichthys - ?middle to late Devonian H. Tetrapoda - late Devonian to Recent Nested taxa and selected synapomorphies (unique characteristics):1 Sarcopterygii (monobasal paired fins, ventral fissure developed dorsally into an intracranial joint, more than four scelerotic plates); 2, maxilla reluced or lost, large basal lobe in fins; 3, Rhipidistia (folded dentine and enamel in teeth, no maxilla-preopercular contact, large quadratojugal. postorbital junction of supraorbital and infraorbital sensory-lines [lost in lungfishes], only three coronoids, nasal capsule with lateral recess, ?dermintermedisl process [lost in porolepiforms]); 4, Dipnomorpha (elongated pectoral fin, with numerous mesomeres, rostral tubules, branched posterior radials in posterior dorsal fins, enamel entering the flask-shaped cavities of cosmine, pineal reached but not surrounded by parietals, no parietal-supraorbital contact, infraorbital sensory-line canal follows premaxillary suture); 5, Tetrapoda (concave glenoid fossa, perforated hurneral process, large entepicondylar process, deltoid and supinator processes on humerus); 6, Choanata (single external nostril, choanae. dermintermedial and tectal processes in external nostril [unless at node 3]); 7. large frontals meeting along the midline, elongated humerus, jugal meeting quadratojugal, dorsally placed orbits, ventrally placed external nostril near oral margin, loss of dorsal and anal fins) |
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