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(American Journal of Botany. 2003;90:755-760.)
© 2003 Botanical Society of America, Inc.


Paleobotany

Cyathea cranhamii sp. nov. (Cyatheaceae), anatomically preserved tree fern sori from the Lower Cretaceous of Vancouver Island, British Columbia1

Selena Y. Smith2, Gar W. Rothwell3 and Ruth A. Stockey2,4

2Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, T6G 2E9 Canada; 3Department of Environmental and Plant Biology, Ohio University, Athens, Ohio 45701 USA

Permineralized cyatheaceous sori occur among remains of conifers, fungi, and other plants in newly discovered calcareous concretions from Early Cretaceous (Barremian) marine sediments of Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada. Sori are superficially attached in two rows to narrow pinnules and display a globose sphaeropteroid indusium. Annulate sporangia with multicellular stalks diverge from a basal, vascularized receptacle. The nearly vertical uniseriate annulus is not interrupted by the stalk. The sporangia bear 64 trilete spores with perispore sculpturing that ranges from irregular granulate/echinate to prominent rodlets. These specimens, described as Cyathea cranhamii sp. nov., are the first anatomically preserved tree fern sori from the fossil record. They represent the most ancient evidence for fertile structures of the Cyatheaceae and demonstrate that essentially modern species of cyatheaceous tree ferns had evolved by the Early Cretaceous.

Key Words: Barremian • British Columbia • Cretaceous • Cyathea cranhamii sp. nov • Cyatheaceae • Filicales


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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
Am. J. Botany, March 1, 2008; 95(3): 330 - 339.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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