Cornuboniscus is an extinctgenus of prehistoric freshwater ray-finned fish that lived during the Pennsylvanianepoch (Carboniferous), and the only member of the family Cornuboniscidae.[2] It contains a single species, C. budensis from the Bashkirian/lower Westphalianage of what is now Cornwall, England.[1][3][4] The genus Cornubonisus was named after the island of Cornubian, and the species name refers to the coastal town of Bude in Cornwall. The type specimen is held in the town's Castle Heritage Centre.[5]
It was initially described as a palaeonisciform, a group of early ray-finned fishes that is now considered to be paraphyletic. On the basis of its paddle-like pectoral fins, it was initially recovered as a descendant of an early group of palaeonisciformes that also gave rise to the Tarrasiiformes and the extant bichirs. A later study instead found it as potentially being sister to the amblypterids and Acrolepis.[6][7][8][9]
Cornuboniscus was a small, sardine-sized fish with an array of razor-sharp teeth likely used to prey on small crustaceans.[10] It inhabited and was likely endemic to Lake Bude, a large, tropical, equatorial lake formed during the Variscan orogeny.[4][5][11]
^ abTurner, Mark (5 February 2024). "Bude's Geology". Visit Bude | Holidays in Bude | North Cornwall. Retrieved 13 June 2024.
^Schultze, Hans-Peter; Mickle, Kathryn E.; Poplin, Cecile; Hilton, Eric J.; Grande, Lance (2021). Handbook of Paleoichthyology, 8A. Actinopterygii I. Palaeoniscimorpha, Stem Neopterygii, Chondrostei. Dr. Friedrich Pfeil, München. p. 299. ISBN978-3-89937-272-4.