Caproberyx is an extinct genus of marine acanthomorph ray-finned fish, possibly a holocentrid, from the Late Cretaceous.
Caproberyx is an extinct genus of marine acanthomorph ray-finned fish, possibly a holocentrid, from the Late Cretaceous.
It contains a single species, C. superbus, from the early to late Turonian of the English Chalk. Other former species found in Lebanon (C. pharsus) and Morocco (C. polydesmus) have been assigned to their own genera (Pattersonoberyx and Stichoberyx respectively). Potential remains of an indeterminate species have also been found in the Smoky Hill Chalk of Kansas, USA. The fossil of a similar fish is also known from the Mancos Shale of New Mexico, USA. left|thumb|296x296px|Restored Western Interior Seaway scene with Caproberyx Previously considered a berycid, it has more recently often been considered an early holocentrid, making it related to squirrelfishes and soldierfishes. However, more recent studies have recovered it as an indeterminate acanthomorph, and possibly most closely related to the Trachichthyiformes.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).