| Literature DB >> 26157631 |
Leyla J Seyfullah1, Eva-Maria Sadowski1, Alexander R Schmidt1.
Abstract
Some higher plants, both angiosperms and gymnosperms, can produce resins and some of these resins can polymerize and fossilize to form ambers. Various physical and chemical techniques have been used to identify and profile different plant resins and have then been applied to fossilized resins (ambers), to try to detect their parent plant affinities and understand the process of polymerization, with varying levels of success. Here we focus on resins produced from today's most resinous conifer family, the Araucariaceae, which are thought to be the parent plants of some of the Southern Hemisphere's fossil resin deposits. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectra of the resins of closely related Araucariaceae species were examined to test whether they could be distinguished at genus and species level and whether the results could then be used to infer the parent plant of a New Zealand amber. The resin FTIR spectra are distinguishable from each other, and the three Araucaria species sampled produced similar FTIR spectra, to which Wollemia resin is most similar. Interspecific variability of the FTIR spectra is greatest in the three Agathis species tested. The New Zealand amber sample is similar in key shared features with the resin samples, but it does differ from the extant resin samples in key distinguishing features, nonetheless it is most similar to the resin of Agathis australis in this dataset. However on comparison with previously published FTIR spectra of similar aged amber and older (Eocene) resinites both found in coals from New Zealand and fresh Agathis australis resin, our amber has some features that imply a relatively immature resin, which was not expected from an amber of the Miocene age.Entities:
Keywords: Amber; Araucariaceae; FTIR; New Caledonia; New Zealand
Year: 2015 PMID: 26157631 PMCID: PMC4493646 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.1067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Modern Araucariaceae resins sampled.
| Genus, species | Locality collected, date | Location of resin sampled |
|---|---|---|
| Northland New Zealand, 2011 | Trunk | |
| Riviere Bleue, New Caledonia, 2011 | Trunk | |
| west of Yaté, New Caledonia, 2011 | Trunk | |
| cultivated tree, Göttingen, Germany, 2014 | Trunk | |
| Mt Humboldt, New Caledonia, 2011 | Branch tip | |
| Port Boisé, New Caledonia, 2011 | Trunk | |
| cultivated tree, Göttingen, Germany, 2014 | Branch tip |
Figure 1Map of New Zealand and close-up of Otago with Idaburn amber locality (red dot) indicated.
Figure 2Amber from the former Idaburn Coal Mine, Otago, southern New Zealand.
(A) Overview of the exposure of the Oturehua Seam in the Fiddlers Member, Dunstan Formation, from which the amber was collected. (B) In situ amber piece at the exposure of the lignite (Oturehua Seam). (C) Washed amber sample (shown in B) from the same site. Scale is 5 cm.
Figure 3Diagrammatic representation of the exposure at the former Idaburn Coal Mine, Otago, southern New Zealand, showing where the amber was collected, with an interpretation of the depositional environment, redrawn from Lee et al. (2003) with permission.
Figure 4Fourier-Transform infrared (FTIR) spectra of araucarian resins and a Miocene New Zealand amber.
Distinctive features of FTIR spectra summarized allowing sample differentiation.
| Sample tested | Key distinguishing features (cm−1) | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3,400 | 1,722 | 1,460 | 1,385 | 1,365 | 1,265 | 1,234 | 1,178 | 1,150 | 1,091 | 1,030 | 791 | |
| Idaburn amber | s | s | - | s | s | - | - | - | - | - | off | s |
|
| s | s | T | p | p | - | s | s | p | p | off | s |
|
| - | s | T | p | s | p | p | p | p | p | p | p |
|
| - | - | - | p | s | - | - | s | p | - | wide | p |
|
| s | - | - | p | p | p | p | p | p | s | p | p |
|
| s | s | T | p | s | p | p | p | p | p | p | p |
|
| s | - | T | p | s | p | p | p | p | p | p | p |
|
| - | s | - | p | s | p | p | p | p | p | p | p |
Notes.
peak
shoulder
no feature present
trough
relatively wider peak
offset peak from measurement
Figure 5Close-up of the 1,550–650 cm−1 spectral region of the Fourier-Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectra of araucarian resins and a Miocene New Zealand amber shown in Fig. 4.