Sub-Order 1. Selachii.
Body elongate or fusiform, shading imperceptibly into a powerful swimming tail. Pectoral fins of moderate size, with contracted bases; not confluent with the sides of the head. Branchial clefts lateral in position. Vertebral centra generally asterospondylic or cyclospondylic.
This sub-order includes such typical Elasmobranchs as the modern Sharks and Dog-Fishes as well as numerous fossil representatives ranging from the Carboniferous, and probably from still earlier periods, to the present day.
Fam. 1. Notidanidae.—Body moderately elongate, the spineless dorsal fin opposite the anal. Mouth ventral; nostrils ventral, near the extremity of the snout, without oro-nasal grooves. Branchial arches and clefts six or seven. Interbranchial septa devoid of marginal frills. Notochord persistent and continuous, partially constricted by simple chorda-centra, each consisting of two distinct rings, without either concentric or radial lamellae, except in one species (Notidanus cinereus), which exhibits a feeble asterospondylism in the caudal vertebrae. Skull amphistylic. Teeth unlike in the two jaws; those in the upper jaw usually with a large central cusp and smaller lateral cusps; those in the lower jaw comb-like, each consisting of numerous graduated pointed cusps inclining in the same direction, and supported on a long basal plate.
The very few species included in this family are widely distributed in the tropical and subtropical regions of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Notidanus (Heptanchus) cinereus, which has seven branchial arches and clefts, inhabits the Mediterranean and Atlantic. N. (Hexanchus) griseus, with six branchial arches and clefts, has a similar distribution, but besides being an occasional visitant to the British coasts, it is not uncommon at Cuba in the West Indies. It is said to grow to a length of 26 feet.
Fossil remains of Notidanus, principally teeth, occur in the Middle and Upper Jurassic, in the Cretaceous, and in the Eocene and Pliocene of England and the Continent.
Fam. 2. Chlamydoselachidae (Frilled Sharks).—Body much elongate. Median fins as in Notidanus. Mouth nearly terminal. Nostrils lateral, nearly terminal, and without oro-nasal grooves. Branchial arches and clefts six. The outer margins of the interbranchial septa are produced into overlapping cutaneous frills, the first of which is developed from the hyoid arch and overlaps the hyobranchial cleft, like a rudimentary operculum. Vertebral column as in the preceding family, but in the hinder part of the trunk the notochord is unconstricted and uniform in diameter, centra being absent. Skull hyostylic. Lateral line an open groove. Teeth alike in both jaws, each consisting of a broad basal plate supporting three slender curved cusps, separated by a pair of much smaller cusps.
The only living species known is Chlamydoselachus anguineus (Fig. 252),[[527]] which occurs in the Pacific near Japan, in deep water off Madeira, and also off the Azores and the coast of Norway. It reaches a length of 4 to 5 feet. Teeth from the Pliocene deposits of Tuscany have been referred to an extinct species, C. lawleyi.
Scarcely anything is known of the habits of the Notidanidae and the Chlamydoselachidae. It is evident that they are closely-related forms, and from the unusual number of their gill-clefts and branchial arches, and the condition of the vertebral column, it is also obvious that they are the most archaic of modern Selachians.