scholarly journals Bennettitalean Leaves From the Permian of Equatorial Pangea—The Early Radiation of an Iconic Mesozoic Gymnosperm Group

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick Blomenkemper ◽  
Robert Bäumer ◽  
Malte Backer ◽  
Abdalla Abu Hamad ◽  
Jun Wang ◽  
...  

Bennettitaleans are an extinct group of gymnosperms that are among the most iconic plants of Earth’s vegetation during the Mesozoic Era. The sudden appearance and rise to dominance of the Bennettitales during the Triassic remains a mystery. Leaf fossils similar to typical bennettitalean foliage occur in late Paleozoic deposits worldwide, but bennettitalean foliage can be identified with certainty only in case the fossils are sufficiently well-preserved to show epidermal features. So far, the characteristic stomatal architecture of the group has never been systematically documented in these putative Paleozoic remains. Here, we present well-preserved bennettitalean leaves from Permian deposits in two widely separated regions of equatorial Pangea. Two species of cuticle-bearing leaf compressions from the late Permian Umm Irna Formation, Jordan, are here formally described as Pterophyllum pottii Bomfleur et Kerp sp. nov. and Nilssoniopteris jogiana Blomenkemper et Abu Hamad sp. nov. Moreover, bulk maceration of samples from the Umm Irna Formation yielded six additional types of dispersed bennettitalean cuticles that are here informally described. In addition, the Cisuralian (early Permian) uppermost part of the Upper Shihhotse Formation exposed at the Palougou section in Shanxi Province, China, has yielded the oldest unambiguous bennettitalean fossils known to date; they consist of fragments of entire-margined leaves with well-preserved cuticles that we assign to Nilssoniopteris shanxiensis Bäumer, Backer et Wang sp. nov. Unlike the characteristic puzzle-patterned cuticles typical of many Jurassic and Cretaceous bennettites, the cuticles of these Permian bennettitalean remains show non-sinuous anticlinal walls, greater variety in stomatal orientation, and rare occurrence of transversely divided subsidiary cells—features that have until now almost exclusively been documented from the hitherto oldest cuticle-bearing Triassic bennettitalean material. Finally, the taxonomic richness, disjunct distribution, and broad variety in macro- and micromorphological features in these Permian bennettitalean remains lead us to suspect that the origin of the group will date back still further in time, and might in fact coincide with very early occurrences of Bennettitales-like foliage from the Pennsylvanian and Cisuralian, such as Pterophyllum cottaeanum, P. eratum, or P. grandeuryi.

IAWA Journal ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 444-458 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne-Laure Decombeix ◽  
Edith L. Taylor ◽  
Thomas N. Taylor

The Glossopteridales are an extinct group of seed plants that dominated Gondwanan floras during the Permian. Their remains are found across a wide range of habitats and paleolatitudes, and it is particularly interesting to understand the anatomical characteristics that might have enabled such an extensive distribution. Here, we document for the first time the bark anatomy of high-latitude glossopteridalean trees using peels and thin sections made from a Late Permian trunk from Skaar Ridge, Antarctica. The bark is 3 cm thick. The secondary phloem is composed of sieve cells, axial and ray parenchyma, and fibers arranged in discontinuous unicellular tangential layers. The outer bark is a rhytidome, with numerous alternating layers of periderm and non-conducting secondary phloem showing some proliferation of the axial parenchyma. Successive periderms mostly run parallel to the cambium, with some longitudinal undulation and rare connections between two periderms. A similar anatomy was observed in bark fragments found isolated in the matrix or closely associated with large glossopterid stems or roots. The anatomy of the Skaar Ridge specimens shows that Antarctic Glossopteridales had a relatively thick, probably stringy bark. The retention of a significant amount of insulating dead bark tissue on the trunk likely provided protection of the cambium, conducting secondary phloem, and potential latent buds against biotic and abiotic environmental hazards (fire, frost, scalding, insects, etc.) and may have contributed to the extensive paleolatitudinal distribution of the Glossopteridales during the Permian.


2013 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 296-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rinku J. DESAI ◽  
Vinay M. RAOLE

Leaf epidermal features are very important in grass systematics for characterization of broad groups, within subfamilies and tribes. Numerous species belonging to sub-tribe Ischaemineae, tribe Andropogoneae, family Poaceae are endemic to the Indian subcontinent, but their micromorphological reports were very scares. Therefore, foliar micromorphological characters of subtribe Ischaemineae have been studied in detail for 16 taxa of subtribe Ischaemineae from Gujarat, India. All the epidermal peels were prepared after following routine scraping method, representative areas were photographed and presented here. Structural diversity as well as metric values for both the epidermises has been recorded. In general, intercostals zones and costal zones are uniform in nature in terms of sinuous papillate long cells, cross-dumbbell-nodular shaped silica cells and triangular-low domed shaped subsidiary cells on stomata. From all the studied micromorphological characters, papillae and microhairs are found to be most useful character to segregate species and genera in subtribe Ischaemineae. Additionally, intercostal silica bodies, hooks, prickles and bulliform cells are also found to be helpful for the same. An artificial key based on observed variable micromorphological features has been also prepared.


Zootaxa ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 3544 (1) ◽  
pp. 41 ◽  
Author(s):  
RENATA MANCONI ◽  
NISIT RUENGSAWANG ◽  
FABIO D. LEDDA ◽  
CHUTIMA HANJAVANIT ◽  
NARUMON SANGPRADUB

Taxonomic richness of Thai Spongillina numbers so far seven species (five genera, one family). The first record of the genusOncosclera Volkmer-Ribeiro, 1970 belonging to the family Potamolepidae Brien, 1967 is here reported with the description ofa new species from the Pong River (NE Thailand, Oriental Region) in the framework of a biodiversity assessment in the LowerMekong Basin. An emended diagnosis of the genus is also provided. The new species, ascribed to the genus Oncosclera fordiagnostic traits of the skeleton and the gemmular architecture, differs from all the other known species of the genus in itsunique combination of diagnostic traits. O. asiatica sp. nov. is characterised by i) more or less alveolate skeleton, ii) conulosesurface with a network of branched subdermal canals, iii) acanthoxeas as dominant megascleres and less frequentacanthostrongyles, iv) gemmular theca sublaminar of compact spongin with a scantly developed pneumatic layer of fibrousspongin, and v) gemmuloscleres as acanthostrongyles from elongated to ovoid with tubercles/spines particularly dense towardsthe tips. Despite the extremely disjunct distribution O. asiatica is morphologically similar to O. intermedia and O. jewelli fromthe Neotropical Region and O. gilsoni from Pacific Islands, from which the former diverges for megascleres and/or gemmuloscleres traits.


1988 ◽  
Vol 62 (01) ◽  
pp. 132-138 ◽  
Author(s):  
David L. Clark ◽  
Wang Cheng-Yuan

TheNeogondolella serrata(Clark and Ethington) group was originally reported as a North American provincial conodont lineage. More or less complete Permian sequences now recognized in China include species originally thought to be part of the North American provincial fauna as well as species reported previously from other parts of the world. Comparison of Chinese and North American species may be useful in correlation of series and stage boundaries between the two areas. The Chinese conodont succession demonstrates that most Permian neogondolellids were not provincial but attained worldwide distribution. Late Permian ancestors of Early TriassicNeogondolellaspecies were apparently widespread in the Tethyan Sea and the sudden appearance of TriassicNeogondolellaspecies in North America without Permian ancestors is only the consequence of the absence of the latest Permian marine rocks in North America.Of particular regional stratigraphic interest is the occurrence of the North American speciesN. wilcoxiClark and Behnken in the Chinese late Guadalupian-Dzhulfian. This occurrence supports a late Guadalupian (post-Lamar) age for the uppermost Gerster Formation in Utah.


Author(s):  
P. Dayanandan ◽  
P. B. Kaufman

A three dimensional appreciation of the guard cell morphology coupled with ultrastjuctural studies should lead to a better understanding of their still obscure dynamics of movement. We have found the SEM of great value not only in studies of the surface details of stomata but also in resolving the structures and relationships that exist between the guard and subsidiary cells. We now report the isolation and SEM studies of guard cells from nine genera of plants.Guard cells were isolated from the following plants: Psilotum nudum, four species of Equisetum, Cycas revoluta, Ceratozamia sp., Pinus sylvestris, Ephedra cochuma, Welwitschia mirabilis, Euphorbia tirucalli and Allium cepa.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin Lipp ◽  
Lisa Marie Kammer ◽  
Murat Kucukdisli ◽  
Adriana Luque ◽  
Jonas Kühlborn ◽  
...  

Simultaneous sulfonylation/arylation of styrene derivatives is achieved in a photoredox-catalyzed three-component reaction using visible light. A broad variety of difunctionalized products is accessible in mostly excellent yields and high diastereoselectivity. The developed reaction is scalable and suitable for the modification of styrene-functionalized biomolecules. Mechanistic investigations suggest the transformation to be operating through a designed sequence of radical formation and radical combination.<br>


2020 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 299-311
Author(s):  
A. G. Desnitskiy

More than ten new species of colonial volvocine algae were described in world literature during recent years. In present review, the published data on taxonomy, geographical distribution and the species problem in this group of algae, mainly from the genera Gonium, Pandorina, Eudorina, and Volvox, are critically discussed. There are both cosmopolitan volvocalean species and species with local or disjunct distribution. On the other hand, the description of new cryptic taxa in some genera of the colonial family Volvocaceae, such as Pandorina and Volvox, complicates the preparation of a comprehensive review on their geography.


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