The
Queensland lungfish,
Neoceratodus forsteri, is
endemic to Australia. Fossil records of this group date back 380 million years, around the time when the
higher vertebrate classes were beginning to evolve. Fossils of lungfish belonging to the genus
Neoceratodus have been uncovered in northern
New South Wales, indicating that the Queensland lungfish has existed in Australia for at least 100 million years, making it a
living fossil and one of the oldest living vertebrate genera on the planet. It is the most primitive surviving member of the ancient air-breathing lungfish (Dipnoi) lineages. The five other freshwater lungfish species,
four in Africa and
one in South America, are very different morphologically to
N. forsteri. When immature it is spotted with gold on a black background. In the adult this fades to a brown or gray color. Its tooth-bearing
premaxillary and
maxillary bones are fused like other lungfish. South American lungfishes also share an autostylic jaw suspension (where the
palatoquadrate is fused to the
cranium) and powerful adductor jaw muscles with the extant lungfish (Dipnoi). Like the
African lungfishes, this species has an elongate, almost eel-like body. It may reach a length of . The
pectoral fins are thin and threadlike, while the pelvic fins are somewhat larger, and set far back. The fins are connected to the shoulder by a single bone, which is a marked difference from most fish, whose fins usually have at least four bones at their base; and a marked similarity with nearly all land-dwelling vertebrates. They have the lowest aquatic respiration of all extant lungfish species, and their gills are greatly reduced and essentially non-functional in the adults. The
marbled lungfish,
Protopterus aethiopicus, is found in Africa. The marbled lungfish is smooth and elongated with deeply embedded
scales, and (starting from the head end) is cylindrical for much of its length. The tail is very long and tapers at the end. They are the largest of the African lungfish species as they can reach a length of up to 200 cm. The pectoral and pelvic fins are also very long and thin, almost spaghetti-like. The newly hatched young have branched external gills much like those of newts. After 2 to 3 months the young transform (called
metamorphosis) into the adult form, losing the
external gills for gill openings. These fish have a yellowish gray or pinkish toned ground color with dark slate-gray splotches, creating a marbling or leopard effect over the body and fins. The color pattern is darker along the top and lighter below. The marbled lungfish's
genome contains 133 billion
base pairs, making it the largest known genome of any
vertebrate. The only
organisms known to have more base pairs are the
protist Polychaos dubium and the flowering plant
Paris japonica at 670 billion and 150 billion, respectively. The
gilled lungfish,
Protopterus amphibius is a species of lungfish found in
East Africa. It generally reaches only long, making it the smallest
extant lungfish in the world. This lungfish is uniform blue, or slate grey in colour. It has small or inconspicuous black spots, and a pale grey belly. The
west African lungfish,
Protopterus annectens, is a species of lungfish found in West Africa. It has a prominent
snout and small
eyes. Its body is long and
eel-like, some 9–15 times the length of the head. It has two pairs of long, filamentous
fins. The
pectoral fins have a basal fringe and are about three times the head length, while its
pelvic fins are about twice the head length. In general, three external
gills are inserted
posterior to the
gill slits and above the pectoral fins. It has
cycloid scales embedded in the skin. There are 40–50 scales between the
operculum and the
anus and 36–40 around the body before the origin of the
dorsal fin. It has 34–37 pairs of
ribs. The
dorsal side is olive or brown in color and the
ventral side is lighter, with great blackish or brownish spots on the body and fins except on its belly. They reach a length of about 100 cm in the wild. The
spotted lungfish,
Protopterus dolloi, is a species of lungfish found in Africa. Specifically, it is found in the
Kouilou-Niari Basin of the
Republic of the Congo and
Ogowe River basin in
Gabon. It is also found in the lower and Middle
Congo River Basins.
Protopterus dolloi can
aestivate on land by surrounding itself in a layer of dried
mucus. It can reach a length of up to 130 cm. ==Taxonomy==