4.7 Article

The Earliest Normal Flower from Liaoning Province, China

Journal

JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE PLANT BIOLOGY
Volume 51, Issue 8, Pages 800-811

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1744-7909.2009.00838.x

Keywords

angiosperm; bisexual; Callianthus; Early Cretaceous; flower; Liaoning; perianth; Yixian Formation

Funding

  1. [PB21091]
  2. [PB21092]
  3. [PB21047]
  4. [PB18320]

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The early evolution of angiosperms has been a focus of intensive research for more than a century. The Yixian Formation in western Liaoning yields one of the earliest angiosperm macrofloras. Despite multitudes of angiosperm fossils uncovered, including Archaefructus and Sinocarpus, no bona fide normal flower has been dated to 125 Ma (mega-annum) or older. Here we report Callianthus dilae gen. et sp. nov. from the Yixian Formation (Early Cretaceous) in western Liaoning, China as the earliest normal flower known to date. The flower demonstrates a typical floral organization, including tepals, androecium, and gynoecium. The tepals are spatulate with parallel veins. The stamens have a slender filament, a globular anther, bristles at the anther apex, and in situ round-triangular pollen grains. The gynoecium is composed of two stylate carpels enclosed in a fleshy envelope, and develops into a hip when mature. Since the well-accepted history of angiosperms is not much longer than 125 Ma, Callianthus together with Chaoyangia, Archaefructus and Sinocarpus from the Yixian Formation demonstrate a surprisingly high diversity of angiosperms, implying a history of angiosperms much longer than currently accepted.

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