4.6 Article

Fossil evidence from South America for the diversification of Cunoniaceae by the earliest Palaeocene

期刊

ANNALS OF BOTANY
卷 127, 期 3, 页码 305-315

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/aob/mcaa154

关键词

Gondwana; fossil flowers; Argentina; palaeobotany; Danian; parsimony

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [DEB-1556136, DEB-0918932, DEB-1556666, DEB-0919071, DEB-0345750, EAR-1925552, EAR-1925755]
  2. Fulbright Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Cunoniaceae are woody plants with a complex history of distribution, dispersal, diversification, and extinction. Fossil flowers from the early Palaeocene have provided new information about the evolution of Cunoniaceae, indicating that the diversification of crown-group Cunoniaceae was already underway by 64 million years ago.
Background and Aims Cunoniaceae are woody plants with a distribution that suggests a complex history of Gondwanan vicariance, long-distance dispersal, diversification and extinction. Only four out of similar to 27 genera in Cunoniaceae are native to South America today, but the discovery of extinct species from Argentine Patagonia is providing new information about the history of this family in South America. Methods We describe fossil flowers collected from early Danian (early Palaeocene, similar to 64 Mya) deposits of the Salamanca Formation. We compare them with similar flowers from extant and extinct species using published literature and herbarium specimens. We used simultaneous analysis of morphology and available chloroplast DNA sequences (trnL-F, rbcL, matK, trnH-psbA) to determine the probable relationship of these fossils to living Cunoniaceae and the co-occurring fossil species Lacinipetalum spectabilum. Key Results Cunoniantha bicarpellata gen. et sp. nov. is the second species of Cunoniaceae to be recognized among the flowers preserved in the Salamanca Formation. Cunoniantha flowers are pentamerous and complete, the anthers contain in situ pollen, and the gynoecium is bicarpellate and syncarpous with two free styles. Phylogenetic analysis indicates that Cunoniantha belongs to crown-group Cunoniaceae among the core Cunoniaceae clade, although it does not have obvious affinity with any tribe. Lacinipetalum spectabilum, also from the Salamanca Formation, belongs to the Cunoniaceae crown group as well, but close to tribe Schizomerieae. Conclusions Our findings highlight the importance of West Gondwana in the evolution of Cunoniaceae during the early Palaeogene. The co-occurrence of C. bicarpellata and L. spectabilum, belonging to different clades within Cunoniaceae, indicates that the diversification of crown-group Cunoniaceae was under way by 64 Mya.

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