4.6 Article

A permineralized Early Cretaceous lycopsid from China and the evolution of crown clubmosses

期刊

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
卷 233, 期 5, 页码 2310-2322

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.17874

关键词

anatomy; fossil; Lycopodiaceae; Lycopodioideae; micro-CT; microphyll; phylogeny; protostele

资金

  1. US National Science Foundation [DEB-1748286]
  2. Oak Spring Garden Foundation
  3. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDB26000000]
  4. Youth Innovation Promotion Association of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [201735]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Lycopodiaceae are a lineage of vascular plants with a long fossil history, and the discovery of Early Cretaceous lycopsid fossils provides compelling evidence for the early presence of crown Lycopodiaceae and Lycopodioideae. The discovery in Asia indicates the existence of crown Lycopodiaceae in the Early Cretaceous, and the similarities in stem anatomy with extant species help in understanding the growth and vascular anatomy of crown-group lycopsids.
Lycopodiaceae are one of three surviving families of lycopsids, a lineage of vascular plants with a fossil history dating to at least the Early Devonian or perhaps the Late Silurian (c. 415 Ma). Many fossils have been linked to crown Lycopodiaceae, but the lack of well-preserved material has hindered definitive recognition of this group in the paleobotanical record. New, exceptionally well-preserved permineralized lycopsid fossils from the Early Cretaceous (125.6 +/- 1.0 Ma) of Inner Mongolia, China, were examined in detail using acetate peel and micro-computed tomography techniques. The anatomy of extant Lycopodiaceae was analyzed for comparison using fluorescence microscopy. Phylogenetic relationships of the new fossil to extant Lycopodiaceae were evaluated using parsimony and maximum likelihood analyses. Lycopodicaulis oellgaardii gen. et sp. nov. provides the earliest unequivocal and best-documented evidence of crown Lycopodiaceae and Lycopodioideae, based on anatomically-preserved fossil material. Recognition of Lycopodicaulis in Asia during the Early Cretaceous indicates the presence of crown Lycopodiaceae at this time, and striking similarities of stem anatomy with extant species provide a framework for the understanding of the interaction of branching and vascular anatomy in crown-group lycopsids.

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