4.5 Article

THE FIRST FOSSIL OF A BOLBITIDOID FERN BELONGS TO THE EARLY-DIVERGENT LINEAGES OF ELAPHOGLOSSUM (DRYOPTERIDACEAE)

期刊

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY
卷 101, 期 9, 页码 1466-1475

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.3732/ajb.1400262

关键词

ancestral state reconstruction; bolbitidoid fern; Dominican amber; Elaphoglossum; eupolypods I; fossil fern; Miocene; Polypodiales

资金

  1. German Excellence Initiative
  2. U.S. National Science Foundation [DEB-1020443]
  3. Division Of Environmental Biology
  4. Direct For Biological Sciences [1020443] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Premise of the study: Closing gaps in the fossil record and elucidating phylogenetic relationships of mostly incomplete fossils are major challenges in the reconstruction of the diversification of fern lineages through time. The cosmopolitan family Dryopteridaceae represents one of the most species-rich families of leptosporangiate ferns, yet its fossil record is sparse and poorly understood. Here, we describe a fern inclusion in Miocene Dominican amber and investigate its relationships to extant Dryopteridaceae. Methods: The morphology of the fossil was compared with descriptions of extant ferns, resulting in it being tentatively assigned to the bolbitidoid fern genus Elaphoglossum. This assignment was confirmed by reconstructing the evolution of the morphological characters preserved in the inclusion on a molecular phylogeny of 158 extant bolbitidoid ferns. To assess the morphology-based assignment of the fossil to Elaphoglossum, we examined DNA-calibrated divergence time estimates against the age of the amber deposits from which it came. Key results: The fossil belongs to Elaphoglossum and is the first of a bolbitidoid fern. Its assignment to a particular section of Elaphoglossum could not be determined; however, sects. Lepidoglossa, Polytrichia, and Setosa can be discounted because the fossil lacks subulate scales or scales with acicular marginal hairs. Thus, the fossil might belong to either sects. Amygdalifolia, Wrightiana, Elaphoglossum, or Squamipedia or to an extinct lineage. Conclusions: The discovery of a Miocene Elaphoglossum fossil provides remarkable support to current molecular clock-based estimates of the diversification of these ferns.

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