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(American Journal of Botany. 2002;89:1547-1549.)
© 2002 Botanical Society of America, Inc.


Brief Communications

Evidence of Carpinus (Betulaceae) in the Late Tertiary (Pliocene) of Alabama1

Debra Z. Stults2, Brian J. Axsmith2,4 and Douglas Haywick3

2Department of Biological Sciences, 3Department of Earth Sciences, University of South Alabama, Mobile, Alabama 36688 USA

Carpinus is a common and widespread element of the modern North American forest vegetation, but its scant fossil record on the continent is perplexing, especially considering the abundant and relatively continuous record of the genus in the Tertiary of Europe and Asia. Despite earlier claims of Tertiary Carpinus remains, recent reviews have indicated that a definitive post-Eocene Tertiary record of the genus in North America is lacking. Therefore, it remains uncertain if Carpinus was present but left no clear fossil record or if the genus became extinct in North America and migrated back to the continent more recently. A reinvestigation of the Citronelle Formation paleoflora has yielded conclusive evidence for the presence of Carpinus in the Gulf Coastal Plain of Alabama during the Pliocene based upon the discovery of a nutlet bract. Carpinus bracts are distinctive and consist of a central bract fused basally with two lateral bractlets. This specimen provides proof of the existence of Carpinus on this continent by the Pliocene Epoch, and any future research on the biogeography of the genus must consider this as the earliest, post-Eocene record of the genus in North America based on unequivocal reproductive structures.

Key Words: Alabama • Betulaceae • bract • Carpinus • Citronelle Formation • Pliocene • Tertiary







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