当前位置: X-MOL 学术Rev. Palaeobot. Palynol. › 论文详情
Our official English website, www.x-mol.net, welcomes your feedback! (Note: you will need to create a separate account there.)
Two new species of Sigillaria Brongniart from the Wuda Tuff (Asselian: Inner Mongolia, China) and their implications for lepidodendrid life history reconstruction
Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology ( IF 1.7 ) Pub Date : 2020-03-01 , DOI: 10.1016/j.revpalbo.2020.104203
Michael P. D'Antonio , C. Kevin Boyce , Jun Wang

Abstract Thin (3–6 cm) arborescent lycopsid axes that conform to the genus Sigillaria have been discovered upright in situ in the Wuda Tuff (Asselian: Inner Mongolia, China). Given that a broad lycopsid tree, Sigillaria cf. ichthyolepis, was the sole arborescent lycopsid taxon previously known from the assemblage, the new fossils were initially assumed to be juveniles of S. cf. ichthyolepis when assessed in the field under active mining conditions. Following retrieval of these specimens, further observation indicated that major discrepancies exist between the surface morphology of these smaller axes and that of S. ichthyolepis. Additionally, anatomical and morphological features of the trunks preclude all possible geometric transformations by which the small Sigillaria stems could be interpreted as juveniles of the larger Sigillaria trees. Two new morphospecies of Sigillaria are recognized from among the thin axes: stems of Sigillaria pfefferkornii sp. nov. and of Sigillaria wudensis sp. nov., the first two sub-canopy species of the genus. This investigation provides a methodology for evaluating whether two fossils may represent early and late ontogenetic stages of the same plant and suggest that we lack an accurate search image for juvenile arborescent lycopsids given that the sapling model fails here. Additionally, the major group of Sigillaria species surviving into the Permian in Cathaysia was more diverse, both taxonomically and ecologically, than previously understood.
更新日期:2020-03-01
down
wechat
bug