Bourbonnella

Bourbonnella
Temporal range:
Bourbonnella sottyi fossil
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Order: Aeduelliformes
Family: Aeduellidae
Genus: Bourbonnella
Heyler, 1967
Type species
Bourbonnella guilloti
Heyler 1967
Species

See text

Bourbonnella is an extinct genus of prehistoric freshwater and coastal marine ray-finned fish that lived during the late Mississippian (Carboniferous) and Asselian (Cisuralian/early Permian epoch) in what is now Burgundy (Autun, France), the Czech Republik (Boskovice Graben), and Utah (United States), with other remains known from elsewhere. The genus was named by Daniel Heyler in 1967.

It contains the following species:

  • B. fourrieri Poplin, 2001 - Late Pennsylvanian (Stephanian) of France
  • B. guilloti Heyler, 1967 - Early Permian (Asselian) of France
  • B. hirsuta Štamberg, 2007 - Early Permian (Sakmarian) of the Czech Republic
  • B. jocelynae Mickle, 2011 - Early Pennsylvanian (Bashkirian) of the United States (Utah)
  • B. sottyi Anonymous, 1972 - Late Pennsylvanian (Stephanian) of France

Indeterminate remains are known from the Carboniferous of the US (New Mexico) and Spain. Specimens from Germany were found in 2001 to belong to Aeduella.

The species B. jocelynae is the earliest known representative of the family Aeduellidae.