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American Journal of Botany, Vol 85, 888, Copyright © 1998 by Botanical Society of America, Inc.


PALEOBOTANY

Osmunda (Osmundaceae) from the Triassic of Antarctica: an example of evolutionary stasis

CJ Phipps, TN Taylor, EL Taylor, R Cúneo, LD Boucher and X Yao

Compressed specimens of the fern Osmunda are described from the Triassic of the Allan Hills, Antarctica. The specimens consist of a once pinnate, deeply pinnatifid fertile frond as well as several sterile specimens. Six pinnae are present on the partial fertile rachis, with two sterile pinnae above four fertile pinnae. Both sterile and fertile specimens are virtually identical to the modern species Osmunda claytoniana. Entire fronds are fragmentary; the longest is 21 cm in length. Sterile pinnae are alternate and deeply pinnatifid, with slightly toothed pinnules and dichotomous venation. Fertile pinnae are 1-1.3 cm long, once pinnate, and lack vegetative lamina. Sporangia are clustered, each 300-375 um in diameter, and possess a transverse annulus 6-8 cells long; dehiscence is by a vertical slit. Fronds arise from a rhizome 4 cm long by 1 cm wide; two croziers are present on the rhizome. Two frond segments up to 6 cm long and three deeply pinnatifid pinnae are present on the uppermost part of one rachis. Pinnules are ~4 mm long and 2-3 mm wide. The presence of this Osmunda species in the Triassic demonstrates stasis of frond morphology, both fertile and vegetative, for the genus.


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N. A. Jud, G. W. Rothwell, and R. A. Stockey
Todea from the Lower Cretaceous of western North America: implications for the phylogeny, systematics, and evolution of modern Osmundaceae
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G. W. Rothwell, E. L. Taylor, and T. N. Taylor
Ashicaulis woolfei n. sp.: additional evidence for the antiquity of osmundaceous ferns from the Triassic of Antarctica
Am. J. Botany, February 1, 2002; 89(2): 352 - 361.
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Copyright © 1998 by the Botanical Society of America, Inc.