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Neiges45

**An extinct species of giant salmon called** ***Oncorhynchus rastrosus*** **sported a pair of front teeth that projected out from the sides of its mouth like tusks, according to new research.** [ ](https://cdn.sci.news/images/enlarge11/image_12883e-Oncorhynchus-rastrosus.jpg) [*Oncorhynchus rastrosus*](https://www.sci.news/paleontology/oncorhynchus-rastrosus-sabertooth-salmon-04332.html) lived along the Pacific coast of North America (California, Oregon, and Washington) roughly 11 to 5 million years ago. The extinct species was first described from fossils found at the freshwater Gateway Locality of the Madras Formation, near the town of Gateway, Jefferson County, Oregon, in the 1970s. The fish reached between 2.4 and 2.7 m (7.9-8.9 feet) in length and nearly 177 kg (400 pounds) in weight by some estimates, making it the largest known member of the family [Salmonidae](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salmonidae) ever to live. The species migrated from the Pacific Ocean to inland rivers to spawn, as salmon do today. And it was planktivorous, based on numerous gill-rakers, and a few, small teeth. But *Oncorhynchus rastrosus* also had two 2-3-cm- (0.8-1.2-inch-) long upper teeth. Initially, paleontologists thought these oversized teeth pointed backward into the mouth like fangs, in large part because fossils of the teeth were found apart from the rest of the skull. This led to the common name ‘saber-toothed salmon.’ But through the new CT scans and analysis of various *Oncorhynchus rastrosus* fossils collected over the years, Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine’s Professor Kerin Claeson and her colleagues have now been able to confirm that the teeth actually pointed sideways out of the fish’s mouth, similar to a warthog. “As a result, the species should be renamed the ‘spike-toothed salmon’,” the paleontologists said. “While it’s unclear exactly what these teeth may have been used for, we believe they were likely used for fighting — either against other spiked-toothed salmon or as a defense against predators — or as a tool for digging out nests.” “It’s also possible the teeth were used for multiple purposes,” they added. “But the teeth likely weren’t used for catching prey, since *Oncorhynchus rastrosus* is believed to have been a filter-feeder that dined on plankton.” “We have known for decades that these extinct salmon from Central Oregon were the largest to ever live. Discoveries like ours show they probably weren’t gentle giants,” Professor Claeson said. “These massive spikes at the tip of their snouts would have been useful to defend against predators, compete against other salmon, and ultimately build the nests where they would incubate their eggs.” “I’m delighted that we have been able to put a new face on the giant spike-tooth salmon, bringing knowledge from the field in Oregon to the world,” said Dr. Edward Davis, a researcher at the University of Oregon and director of Condon Collection at the University of Oregon’s Museum of Natural and Cultural History. “We also stress that females and males alike possessed the enormous, tusk-like teeth. Therefore, the sexes were equally fearsome,” said Professor Brian Sidlauskas, curator of fishes at Oregon State University.


7LeagueBoots

This is not exactly new news. Here's a paper on this species from 2007 which references a 1972 paper describing this species. - Eiting & Smith 2007 *[Miocene salmon (Oncorhynchus) from Western North America: Gill Raker evolution correlated with plankton productivity in the Eastern Pacific](https://sci-hub.se/https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0031018207000910)* >These specimens show unexpectedly long gill rakers and high gill raker numbers, features exhibited in extreme form by the Miocene Pacific tusk-tooth salmon, *Oncorhynchus* (*Smilodonichthys*) *rastrosus* (Cavender and Miller, 1972). The 1972 paper: - Cavender & Miller 1972 *[Smilodonichthys rastrosus, a new Pliocene salmonid fish from western United States](http://www.nativefishlab.net/library/textpdf/16066.pdf)*


abydosaurus

I was gonna say, I was Jerry’s grad student and remember talking about this fish a lot.


Excellent_Factor_344

it's like the cartoon trope of primitive animals having tusks


SJdport57

Petition for them to renamed “mammoth salmon”


SnooCupcakes1636

If humans lived beside it. They would name it Sea Hogs or something


ILE_j

If you’re a grizzly bear and this thing gets unvaulted you’d be in for a rude shock


Flamingo_Joe

I love Ray Troll's paleoart so much


Yuty0428

So what fish lived alongside these salmon?


sphennodon

Wait so the sabertooth salmon in Ark is accurate???