Breeding of Polyterus, the most basal living actinopterygian, provided the opportunity to study the surface structure of its eggs with SEM for the first time. The investigation; revealed the previously overlooked presence of a micropyle at the animal egg pole, thus rejecting recent textbook belief that the eggs of Polypterus lack a micropyle. Comparison with data for other gnathostomes demonstrates that eggs with a micropyle are a further synapomorphy for Actinopterygii and confirm membership of the Cladistia in that group.