Literature DB >> 10860906

New perspectives on the Mesozoic seed fern order Corystospermales based on attached organs from the Triassic of Antarctica.

B J Axsmith1, E L Taylor, T N Taylor, N R Cuneo.   

Abstract

A new Triassic corystosperm is described from the Shackleton Glacier region of Antarctica. The compression fossils include cupulate organs (Umkomasia uniramia) and leaves (Dicroidium odontopteroides) attached to short shoot-bearing branches. The cupulate organs occur in groups near the apices of the short shoots, and each consists of a single axis with a pair of bracts and a subapical whorl of five to eight ovoid cupules. This unique architecture indicates that the cupules are individual megasporophylls rather than leaflets of a compound megasporophyll. A branch bearing an attached D. odontopteroides leaf provides the first unequivocal evidence that Umkomasia cupulate organs and Dicroidium leaves were produced by the same plants. Although this had previously been assumed based on organ associations, the new specimens are important in demonstrating that a single species of corystosperm produced the unique cupulate organs described here and the geographically and stratigraphically widespread and common D. odontopteroides leaf. Therefore, biostratigraphic, paleoecological, and phylogenetic studies that treat Dicroidium leaf morphospecies as proxies for biological species of entire plants should be reconsidered. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that the corystosperm cupule is an unlikely homologue for the angiosperm carpel or outer integument.

Year:  2000        PMID: 10860906

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Bot        ISSN: 0002-9122            Impact factor:   3.844


  2 in total

1.  The presumed ginkgophyte Umaltolepis has seed-bearing structures resembling those of Peltaspermales and Umkomasiales.

Authors:  Fabiany Herrera; Gongle Shi; Niiden Ichinnorov; Masamichi Takahashi; Eugenia V Bugdaeva; Patrick S Herendeen; Peter R Crane
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2017-03-06       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  New insights into Mesozoic cycad evolution: an exploration of anatomically preserved Cycadaceae seeds from the Jurassic Oxford Clay biota.

Authors:  Alan R T Spencer; Russell J Garwood; Andrew R Rees; Robert J Raine; Gar W Rothwell; Neville T J Hollingworth; Jason Hilton
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2017-08-28       Impact factor: 2.984

  2 in total

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