4.0 Article

Selaginella in Cretaceous amber from Myanmar

Journal

WILLDENOWIA
Volume 52, Issue 2, Pages 179-245

Publisher

BOTANISCHER GARTEN & BOTANISCHE MUSEUM BERLIN-DAHLEM
DOI: 10.3372/wi.52.52203

Keywords

Angiosperm Terrestrial Revolution; bilateral strobilus; Burmese amber; Kachin amber forest; spike mosses; palaeoecology; resupinate strobilus; spike moss palaeodiversity; sporophyll-pteryx; tetrastichous strobilus

Categories

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [450754641]

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This article describes 20 new fossil species of Selaginella found in mid-Cretaceous amber from Myanmar, as well as revises a previously described species. These fossils provide important clues about the diversity and distribution of Selaginella during the Cretaceous period and contribute to the study of its evolutionary history.
Selaginella (Selaginellales, Selaginellaceae) is the most speciose genus of lycophytes and, with approximately 750 recognized present-day species, also one of the largest genera of vascular plants. However, the evolutionary history of this species richness remains largely unresolved. Recent research suggests that Selaginella was diverse already in the mid-Cretaceous and shows that S. subg. Stachygynandrum dates back at least to the incipient Angiosperm Terrestrial Revolution some 100 million years ago. Here, we describe 20 new fossil-species of Selaginella based on fertile shoots and spores preserved in mid-Cretaceous Kachin amber from Myanmar and emend the previously described S. cretacea. Ten of the species (S. ciliifera, S. cretacea, S. grimaldii, S. heterosporangiata, S. longifimbriata, S. minutissima, S. ohlhoffiorum, S. patrickmuelleri, S. villosa, S. wangxinii) represent S. subg. Stachygynandrum because they possess anisophyllous strobili. The other eleven species have isophyllous strobili. Two of them (S. isophylla, S. wunderlichiana) are tentatively assigned to S. subg. Ericetorum, whereas the others (S. amplexicaulis, S. aurita, S. heinrichsii, S. konijnenburgiae, S. obscura, S. ovoidea, S. pellucida, S. tomescui, S. wangboi) cannot be placed into any fossil or extant subgenus. The fossils described in this study nearly duplicate the documented record of free-sporing plants from Kachin amber. The abundance and diversity of cryptogams, along with the absence of xerophytes among the taxa, is suggestive of constantly high humidity in the understory of the source forests of this amber.

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