Fig. 288.—Lateral view of a restored skull and pectoral girdle of Chondrosteus acipenseroides. a, Angular; br, branchiostegal rays; c.h, cerato-hyal; h.m, hyomandibular; j, jugal; p.f, post-frontal; s.op, suboperculum; s.t, supra-temporal; other reference letters as in Fig. 284. (After Traquair.)

The most interesting illustration of the first point is to be found in the condition of the primitive upper jaw which, especially in the Polyodontidae, is typically Elasmobranch in the median union of the palato-quadrate bars beneath the basis cranii, but Teleostome in the presence of a secondary upper jaw formed by two maxillae. Both families also agree in possessing an acentrous vertebral column which, if it does so far resemble that of Teleostomes in being potentially arco-centrous, nevertheless has a better developed series of distinct inter-dorsal and inter-ventral cartilages, regularly alternating with only partially bony basi-dorsals and basi-ventrals, than is to be met with in any other adult Fishes except Elasmobranchs. Primitive features are apparent in the presence of spiracles, sometimes associated with pseudobranchs; the presence in one family (Acipenseridae) of a hyoidean hemibranch supplied with blood directly from the ventral aorta, and the existence of a multi-valvular conus arteriosus and an intestinal spiral valve. Finally, the massive growth of the chondrocranium wholly devoid of cartilage bones, except in so far as they may be represented by splint-like membrane bones, the fragmentation of the investing dermal bones, the degeneration of the opercular skeleton and the loss of branchiostegal rays, and the almost complete disappearance of the primitive rhombic squamation, are probably to be regarded as the outcome of a long-continued career of degeneration from some remote Palaeoniscid ancestor.

Fam. 6. Polyodontidae.—The Polyodontidae are more generalised, and in some features decidedly more Selachioid than the Acipenseridae. Body fusiform and apparently scaleless, but the primitive squamation is still represented by isolated vestigial scales imbedded in the otherwise soft skin, and by a continuous series of rhombic scales on the upper caudal lobe, which also has a dorsal fringe of large fulcra.[[583]] Rostrum exceptionally long, spatulate or somewhat conical, with a rigid axis and thinner and more flexible margins. Barbels absent. Mouth wide, not spout-like. Pectoral fins devoid of spines. Two pairs of membrane-closed vacuities separate the paired dermal bones of the cranial roof (possibly parietals and frontals) from the more laterally-placed post-temporals and squamosals, and there are no median plates posterior to the orbits, nor any representatives of supra-temporals. A feeble suboperculum is retained in addition to a small rayed operculum. Hyoidean hemibranch completely suppressed. Two genera only are known, each with a single species.

Fig. 289.—Polyodon folium. a, Anus; f, fulcra; n, nostrils; op, operculum; sc, rhombic scales on the upper caudal lobe; sp, left spiracle.

The Paddle-Fish or Spoon-Bill, Polyodon folium (Fig. 289) inhabits the rivers of the Southern States of North America, the Mississippi, Ohio, and Missouri, and their numerous tributary rivers and streams. A Fish of sluggish habits, Polyodon feeds chiefly on mud and the minute organisms it contains, the exceptionally long gill-rakers probably forming an efficient filter to prevent the food particles escaping through the gill-clefts with the expiratory water current. The singular rostrum is apparently used for stirring up the mud when feeding, but in view of the muddy waters the Fish frequents, and the very small size of the eyes, its value as a tactile organ must not be overlooked. Polyodon may attain a length of 5 to 6 feet. The time of spawning varies, according to locality, from March to June. Nothing is known of the development of Polyodon. Young less than 6 to 8 inches in length are unknown, and specimens of this size are very rarely seen. The jaws are furnished with minute teeth until the Fish is about half-grown, when they become edentalous. Caviare is made from the eggs, and the centres at which this industry is carried on are chiefly situated along the course of the Mississippi. The second species, Psephurus gladius, inhabits the Yang-tse-Kiang and Hoangho rivers of China, and differs from Polyodon in the conical shape of its rostrum and the smaller number and larger size of its fulcra. Psephurus is stated to reach a length of 20 feet. The family is represented in the Eocene of Wyoming by the genus Crossopholis, which is note-worthy for the retention of trunk scales in the form of small, somewhat quadrate denticulated discs, arranged in oblique rows.

Fam. 7. Acipenseridae.—In the Sturgeon family the body is elongate, cylindrical, and somewhat bulky. Rostrum well developed and often massive, with a transverse row of simple or branched preoral barbels on its ventral surface. Mouth small and remarkably protrusible. Jaws devoid of teeth except in the larvae. As in the preceding family, the primitive rhombic squamation is confined to the upper lobe of the tail, which, like the dorsal and anal fins, is furnished with fulcra. Elsewhere the scales are represented by five longitudinal rows of large bony scutes and by intervening small scattered ossifications. The anterior dermal ray of the pectoral fin is stout and spine-like. The dermal bones of the cranial roof suturally articulate with one another to form a continuous shield, uninterrupted by lateral vacuities. A median dermal bone in the occipital region transmits the occipital sensory canal. The opercular series is represented only by an opercular bone.

The family includes but two genera, Acipenser (Fig. 290) and Scaphirhynchus, and about twenty species, confined to the seas, estuaries, and rivers of the temperate and north temperate regions of the northern hemisphere. Acipenser includes the more typical Sturgeons, and is distinguished by the presence of spiracles, and by the fact that the longitudinal rows of scutes remain distinct to the base of the caudal fin.

Fig. 290.—The Sterlet (Acipenser ruthenus). o, Barbels; c.f, caudal fin; d.f, dorsal fin; pct.f, pectoral fin; pv.f, pelvic fin; sc, scutes; v.f, ventral or anal fin. (From Parker and Haswell, after Cuvier.)