4.1 Article

Leafy branches of Gangamopteris from the Gzhelian-Asselian of westernmost Gondwana

Journal

COMPTES RENDUS PALEVOL
Volume 18, Issue 8, Pages 913-924

Publisher

MUSEUM NATL HISTOIRE NATURELLE
DOI: 10.1016/j.crpv.2019.10.004

Keywords

Gangamopteris; Upper Paleozoic; Leaves; Phyllotaxis; Gondwana; Argentina

Categories

Funding

  1. Agencia Nacional de Promocion Cientifica y Tecnologica [PICT 584, PICT 1312]

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The first reconstructions of glossopterids interpreted this Gondwanan group as arborescent, deciduous plants, with leaves and reproductive structures inserted on short shoots, which were arranged on long branches. The leaves are its most abundant organ in the fossil record, but they are mainly found isolated. The arrangement of the leaves as terminal whorls or tight spirals has been the most accepted phyllotaxis hypothesis. The few examples of leaf impressions preserved in connection with axes correspond mainly to leaves of Glossopteris Brongniart, and mostly without clear evidence of the type of insertion. Several specimens of Gangamopteris McCoy leaves attached to axes from the Bajo de Veliz Formation (Latest Carboniferous-Earliest Cisuralian) facilitate reconstruction of the foliar arrangement of the genus, to date known mostly from isolated leaves. The available evidence from the new specimens confirms a variation from well-spaced to dense helical insertion of the leaves without forming true whorls, and discards the early notion that they were mainly clustered apically on short shoots in a similar manner to the extant Ginkgoales. (C) 2019 Academie des sciences. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.

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