Knightia

Artist's reconstruction

Knightia is an extinct genus of freshwater fish that lived in the lakes and rivers of North America and Asia during the Eocene epoch. It was discovered by David Starr Jordan in 1907. Knightia is Wyoming's state fossil, belonging to the same taxonomic family as herring and sardines. It likely fed on algae and diatoms, as well as smaller fish and insects.

Species

  • Knightia alta Leidy, 1873
  • Knightia branneri
  • Knightia eocaena Jordan, 1907 (type)
  • Knightia humulus
  • Knightia irregularis Longstaff, 1933
  • Knightia vetusta Grande, 1982

Predators

Bigger species preyed on Knightia, such as Diplomystus, Lepisosteus, Amphiplaga, Mioplosus, Phareodus, Amia, and Astephus.

Related pages

References

  1. Jordan, D. S. 1907. "The fossil fishes of California; with supplementary notes on other species of extinct fishes". Bulletin Department of Geology, University of California 5:136.
  2. http://soswy.state.wy.us/SecretaryDesk/StateInfo_Symbols.aspx Archived 2011-09-06 at the Wayback Machine.
Knightia alta specimen

Other websites

Taxon identifiers
  • Wikidata: Q288279
  • Wikispecies: Knightia (Clupeidae)
  • BOLD: 663480
  • Fossilworks: 35455
  • GBIF: 3238478
  • iNaturalist: 1205254