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EXTREME HEAT WARNING: The National Weather Service has issued an extreme heat warning for our area from Wednesday afternoon – Friday evening. Please be advised that Laudholm Beach is a 0.6 mile walk from the parking lot. Please carry water with you and take steps to avoid heat-related illness: drink plenty of fluids, stay out of the sun, reduce activity.

The Wrack

The Wrack is the Wells Reserve blog.

Teleost Tuesday

Posted by | January 2, 2007

What's a teleost? Let's see what Wikipedia has to offer...

Teleostei is one of three infraclasses in class Actinopterygii, the ray-finned fishes. This diverse group, which arose in the Triassic period, includes 20,000 extant species in about 40 orders. The other two infraclasses, Holostei and Chondrostei, are paraphyletic.

Alright: Teleosts are ray-finned fish that developed 200 to 250 million years ago, making them evolutionarily "advanced" relative to some ancient fish species. About 80 percent of the world's 25,000 fish species are teleosts.

When Wells Reserve scientists study fish, they invariably focus on teleosts. So as we develop a simple guide to our region's coastal fish species? due this spring? only one non-teleost ekes its way in.