4.1 Article

The diversity of Australian Mesozoic bennettitopsid reproductive organs

Journal

PALAEOBIODIVERSITY AND PALAEOENVIRONMENTS
Volume 98, Issue 1, Pages 71-95

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s12549-017-0286-z

Keywords

Bennettitales; Fredlindiales; Reproductive biology; Floral diversity; New species; Williamsonia

Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council [2014-5234]
  2. National Science Foundation [1636625]
  3. German and Swedish Research Councils (DFG) [KR2125/3, VR 2012-4375]
  4. 'Friends of the Swedish Museum of Natural History'
  5. SYNTHESYS [AT-TAF 467]

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Several dispersed reproductive organs of bennettitopsid gymnosperms are described and illustrated from Triassic to Cretaceous strata of Australia: Williamsonia eskensis sp. nov. (Middle Triassic), Williamsonia ipsvicensis sp. nov. (Upper Triassic), Williamsonia durikaiensis sp. nov. (Lower Jurassic), Williamsonia sp. (Lower Jurassic), Williamsonia rugosa sp. nov. (Middle Jurassic), Williamsonia gracilis sp. nov. (Lower Cretaceous), Cycadolepis ferrugineus sp. nov. (Lower Jurassic), Cycadolepis sp. (Lower Cretaceous), and Fredlindia moretonensis Shirley 1898 comb. nov. (Upper Triassic). Among these, W. eskensis appears to represent the oldest bennettitalean reproductive structure yet identified. Although global floras expressed less provincialism during the Mesozoic and many genera are cosmopolitan, Australian bennettopsid species appear to have been endemic based on the morphological characters of the reproductive structures. Bennettopsids have a stratigraphic range of around 210 million years in Australia and are widely and abundantly represented by leaf fossils, but only around 20 specimens of reproductive structures, of which half are attributed to Fredlindia, have been recovered from that continent's geological archive. The extremely low representation of reproductive organs vis-A -vis foliage is interpreted to reflect a combination of physical disintegration of the seed-bearing units while attached to the host axis and, potentially, extensive vegetative reproduction in bennettopsids growing at high southern latitudes during the Mesozoic.

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