Aulopiformes

Aulopiformes
Temporal range: Early Cretaceous to present
Variegated lizardfish, Synodus variegatus
(Synodontoidei: Synodontidae)
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Actinopterygii
Clade: Eurypterygii
Superorder: Cyclosquamata
Order: Aulopiformes
D. E. Rosen, 1973
Type genus
Aulopus
Cloquet, 1816
Suborders
  • Alepisauroidei
  • Chlorophthalmoidei
  • Enchodontoidei
  • Giganturoidei
  • Synodontoidei
Synonyms

Macristiidae (see text)

Aulopiformes /ˈɔːləpɪfɔːrmz/ is a diverse order of marine ray-finned fish consisting of some 15 extant and several prehistoric families with about 45 genera and over 230 species. The common names grinners, lizardfishes and allies, or aulopiforms are sometimes used for this group. They are included in the superorder Cyclosquamata, though modern taxonomists consider this superorder to be unwarranted.

Many extant aulopiforms are deep-sea fishes, with some species recognized as being hermaphroditic, a number of which are able to self-fertilise. Some are benthic, but most are pelagic swimmers (nektonic). A clade of Aulopiformes, the suborder Enchodontoidei and its many constituent families, were dominant nektonic fish throughout much of the Late Cretaceous before the extinction of most of their members around the K–Pg event, with the Dercetidae surviving for some time in the Cenozoic.