scholarly journals A 100‐Million‐Year Gap in the Knowledge of the Evolutionary History of Bromeliaceae: A Brief Review of Fossil Records

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Igor Musauer Kessous ◽  
Beatriz Neves ◽  
Fabiano Salgueiro ◽  
Andrea Ferreira Costa
1938 ◽  
Vol 57 ◽  
pp. 221-227
Author(s):  
James Small

Applying Udny Yule's formulæ (1924) to the Compositæ, Small (1937) found that the average ages in doubling periods (Dp-ages) of the tribes of Compositæ, when plotted against a time-scale, gave points on an exponential curve called the BAT curve. If this curve is characteristic of average families of Angiosperms it should be possible to place the Dp-ages of tribes within other families on this curve as plotted against geological time, and thus obtain an order of geological origin which is quite independent of actual fossil records and which can be checked against any facts known concerning the evolutionary history of the family.


PeerJ ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. e9051
Author(s):  
Jorge D. Carrillo-Briceño ◽  
Jaime A. Villafaña ◽  
Carlos De Gracia ◽  
F. Fernando Flores-Alcívar ◽  
René Kindlimann ◽  
...  

The occurrence and diversity of elasmobranchs from the Oligocene–Miocene boundary from Tropical America is poorly known in comparison with the paleodiversity from younger Neogene intervals of the region. Here we describe a new elasmobranch assemblage from the rich fossil site of Montañita-Olón (Dos Bocas Formation, Santa Elena, Ecuador), where other vertebrates have already been described: for example, sea turtles and cetaceans. We report a total of 27 elasmobranch taxa, 19 of which are new fossil records for Ecuador, 10 new records for the Central Eastern Pacific and four new records for South America. Additionally, in order to reconstruct the environment where these marine remains were deposited, we performed abundance, paleobathymetric and habitat preference analyses, concluding that they were likely deposited in an outer neritic (open shelf) environment. The study of Oligocene and early Miocene marine elasmobranchs faunas in Tropical America is key to addressing the issues in the evolutionary history of this group.


2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 036-040
Author(s):  
ZIWEI YIN ◽  
DEYAO ZHOU

The tribe Scydmaenini is the second most diverse group of the ant-like stone beetle subfamily Scydmaeninae, with more than 730 extant species classified in seven extant genera (Newton, 2019). However, confirmed fossil records important for elucidating the evolutionary history of the tribe are extremely rare, represented by only two species previously reported from mid-Cretaceous Myanmar amber (Yin et al., 2018; Yin & Cai, 2019). Provided in this paper is the description of a third fossil species of Scydmaenini, again from Burmese amber, which sheds new light on the palaeodiversity and morphological disparity of this group during its early evolutionary stage.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (25) ◽  
pp. 14299-14305 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saihong Yang ◽  
Huaiyu He ◽  
Fan Jin ◽  
Fucheng Zhang ◽  
Yuanbao Wu ◽  
...  

The Lower Cretaceous Huajiying Formation of the Sichakou Basin in northern Hebei Province, northern China contains key vertebrate taxa of the early Jehol Biota, e.g.,Protopteryx fengningensis,Archaeornithura meemannae,Peipiaosteus fengningensis, andEoconfuciusornis zhengi. This formation arguably documents the second-oldest bird-bearing horizon, producing the oldest fossil records of the two major Mesozoic avian groups Enantiornithes and Ornithuromorpha. Hence, precisely determining the depositional ages of the Huajiying Formation would advance our understanding of the evolutionary history of the Jehol Biota. Here we present secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) U-Pb zircon analysis results of eight interbedded tuff/tuffaceous sandstone samples from the Huajiying Formation. Our findings, combined with previous radiometric dates, suggest that the oldest enantiornithine and ornithuromorph birds in the Jehol Biota are ∼129−131 Ma, and that the Jehol Biota most likely first appeared at ∼135 Ma. This expands the biota’s temporal distribution from late Valanginian to middle Aptian with a time span of about 15 My.


2018 ◽  
Vol 41 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin Arceneaux

AbstractIntuitions guide decision-making, and looking to the evolutionary history of humans illuminates why some behavioral responses are more intuitive than others. Yet a place remains for cognitive processes to second-guess intuitive responses – that is, to be reflective – and individual differences abound in automatic, intuitive processing as well.


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