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Abstract

Six enigmatic fossils from the Famennian (Devonian) Cleveland Shale in Ohio, U.S.A., are interpreted here as

arthrodiran (Placodermi) egg cases. Recognition as egg cases is confirmed based on the observation of layered

collagen fibers. The presence of a tuberculated bone fragment preserved within one case confirms a vertebrate

source. The nature of the tubercles and the unique morphology of the egg cases supports the interpretation of

an arthrodiran source. Reports of Devonian egg cases are limited to either assumed chondrichthyan producers

or a putative ‘egg sac’ with a morphology atypical for any vertebrate. The Cleveland Shale egg cases thus

represent the first record for a non-chondrichthyan producer. Among placoderms, behaviors of a pelagic life

style with obligate nesting sites, reef fishes with live birth, and estuarine and fluvial nurseries, along with eggcase

oviparity testifies to the diversity of reproductive strategies. As with modern fishes these strategies may

be ecologically driven and the derived and variable reproductive biology of extant chondrichthyans is actually

a primitive condition among gnathostomes. One consequence of the diversity of reproductive strategies (dependent

on the topology of relationships) is the independent origin of internal fertilization within placoderms,

possibly suggesting external fertilization as the primitive gnathostome reproductive mode.

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Authors and Affiliations

Robert K. Carr
Gary Jackson

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