A diverse fish paleofauna occurs in the upper Campanian portion of the Rybushka Formation exposed near Saratov city in the Saratov Oblast, Russia. Twenty taxa have been identified, including two holocephalans (Ischyodus bifurcatus and Amylodon karamysh), twelve elasmobranchs (Synechodus sp., Cederstroemia sp., Cretalamna cf. C. borealis, C. cf. C. sarcoportheta, Archaeolamna kopingensis, Eostriatolamia segedini, E. venusta, Pseudocorax laevis, Squalicorax kaupi, Squalicorax morphotype 1, Squalidae indet., and Squatirhina sp.), and six teleosts (Pachyrhizodus sp., Saurocephalus lanciformis, Paralbula casei, Enchodus cf. E. dirus, E. cf. E. gladiolus, and E. petrosus). Many of these taxa are new to the Campanian fish record of Russia, and the assemblage demonstrates that there is significant taxonomic overlap between the Rybushka Formation paleofauna and that of North America.
Isolated teeth belonging to the genus Ptychodus Agassiz, 1834 (Chondrichthyes; Elasmobranchii) from the Upper Cretaceous of the Ryazan and Moscow Oblast regions (European Russia) are described and discussed in detail herein. The taxonomic composition of the Ptychodus assemblage from the Ryazan region is very diverse including the first records of the cuspidate species P. altior and P. anonymus, which thus is largely consistent with those from other contemporaneous European localities. Ptychodus ubiquitously inhabited epicontinental seas of Europe during most of the Cretaceous with the most diverse assemblages coming from southern England, northern Italy, Belgium, and European Russia. Additionally, the material documented here from the Cenomanian of Varavinsky ravine area (Moscow Oblast) represents the northernmost occurrence of Ptychodus hitherto reported from Europe. It is evident that the Late Cretaceous shallow seas of the Russian platform represented a crucial pathway for the dispersal of Ptychodus from the European peri-Tethys to the eastern margins of the Neo-Tethyan Ocean. The Albian-Campanian records of Ptychodus from Europe indicate that its dominance in the peri-Tethys persisted for most of its evolutionary history. A local temperature drop across most of the European shallow seas probably contributed to the narrowing of its geographic range in the peri-Tethyan seas towards the end of the Mesozoic Era. The fossil remains of Ptychodus documented herein are accordingly of utmost importance for better understanding the taxonomic composition of Russian fossil ichthyofaunas and also inform about the dispersal of Ptychodus towards western and eastern peri-Tethyan seas during the Late Cretaceous.
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