Agnatha

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See also: agnatha

Translingual[edit]

Hagfishes have spinal columns and skulls like the gnathostomes, but are jawless, with rounded mouthparts, adapted to rasping and sucking

Etymology[edit]

From Ancient Greek ἀ- (a-, without) + γνάθος (gnáthos, jaw).

Proper noun[edit]

Agnatha

  1. The jawless fishes, or agnathans; they have backbones and skulls like the scaly fishes, and like reptiles, mammals and other vertebrates on land, but they do not have paired jaws like humans or sharks; instead their mouthparts are round; they suck onto their prey or food and rasp away bits that they then swallow.
    1. A taxonomic superclass within the subphylum Vertebrata.
      • 1889, Edward Drinker Cope, “Synopsis of the Families of Vertebrata”, in The American Naturalist, volume 23 (in English), page 852:
        The known members of the class Agnatha are a very small representation of those that once existed; and they present a great variety of character, having little affinity with each other.
      • 2007, Chad Thomas et al., Freshwater Fishes of Texas (in English), Texas A&M University Press, page 6:
        Current classification schemes have living fishes assigned to two superclasses (Agnatha, or jawless chordates, and Gnathostomata, or jawed chordates)[…].
    2. A taxonomic infraphylum within the subphylum Vertebrata.[1]

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References[edit]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Ruggiero MA, Gordon DP, Orrell TM, Bailly N, Bourgoin T, Brusca RC, et al. (2015) A Higher Level Classification of All Living Organisms. PLoS ONE 10(4): e0119248. PMID 25923521, doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0119248