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(American Journal of Botany. 2006;93:197-205.)
© 2006 Botanical Society of America, Inc.


Paleobotany

Pinus baileyi (section Pinus, Pinaceae) from the Paleogene of Idaho, USA1

Diane M Erwin2 and Howard E Schorn

Museum of Paleontology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720-4780 USA

ABSTRACT

Pinus baileyi from the Paleogene of Idaho was initially related to the bristlecone pine P. longaeva (subgen. Strobus, sect. Parrya, subsect. Balfourianae) from western North America. Unlike the centromucronate condition in P. longaeva, P. baileyi cones have raised umbos that are excentromucronate, i.e., the mucro positioned in the upper umbo field above the keel. Cone size and scale morphology shows that P. baileyi more closely resembles excentromucronate pines of subsects. Halepenses and Pinus sensu Gernandt et al. (2005, Taxon 54: 29–42), but is most similar to P. resinosa, P. kesiya, and P. massoniana of subsect. Pinus. Morphologically, P. baileyi resembles the fossil species P. princetonensis and P. arnoldii from the Eocene Princeton Chert, British Columbia, Canada. Pinus baileyi extends the western North American range of ovulate cones resembling subsect. Pinus from the middle Eocene of British Columbia, Canada and Washington, USA to the Oligocene of Idaho, USA. Pinus baileyi, and possibly P. princetonensis and P. arnoldii, indicates the presence of early populations of subsect. Pinus-type pines in the western cordillera of North America, raising the possibility that P. resinosa and P. tropicalis may have evolved from this group.

Key Words: Balfourianae • Haynes Creek • Idaho • ovulate cones • Paleogene • Pinus baileyi • subsection Pinus • Thunder Mountain




This article has been cited by other articles:


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Mol Biol EvolHome page
A. Willyard, J. Syring, D. S. Gernandt, A. Liston, and R. Cronn
Fossil Calibration of Molecular Divergence Infers a Moderate Mutation Rate and Recent Radiations for Pinus
Mol. Biol. Evol., January 1, 2007; 24(1): 90 - 101.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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