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Department of Botany, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706 USA
Received for publication January 3, 2000. Accepted for publication June 8, 2000.
| ABSTRACT |
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Key Words: bryophytes calyptra microfossils mosses Polytrichum.
| INTRODUCTION |
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An alternative explanation for the relatively late appearance of bryophyte macrofossils invokes the relatively low-preservation potential of intact bryophyte thalli. Bryophytes lack lignified tissues, and liverwort and hornwort gametophytes, in particular, are often of delicate construction. Consequently, early Paleozoic remains of undisputed bryophyte-like plants are rarely found as whole specimens, except under exceptional preservational conditions (Edwards, Duckett, and Richardson, 1995
). However, the earliest bryophytes might have left more extensive microfossil remains, such as small fragments of decay-resistant tissues and spores. This idea was first suggested by Gray and Boucot (1977, 1978, 1980
; Gray, Massa, and Boucot, 1982
) who described Ordovician spores and cellular scraps that were distinctly different from vascular plants but were reminiscent of bryophytes. In particular, Ordovician spore tetrads resembled those of the modern liverwort Sphaerocarpos (Gray, 1985). Recently, comparative studies of extant bryophytes and ancient fossils have been used to test the hypothesis that bryophytes may also have left an early record of vegetative remains.
Kroken, Graham, and Cook (1996)
subjected a variety of extant bryophytes to a high-temperature, acid hydrolysis procedure that more or less mimics the taphonomic changes experienced by ancient plants. In addition to spores, bryophyte sporangial epidermis and placenta, as well as leaves, stems, and rhizoids of mosses, were found to survive as microscopic remains, with their resistance attributed to the presence of autofluorescent polyphenolic compounds in the cell walls. Acid- hydrolyzed remains were interpreted as the parts of a bryophyte that have the potential to survive degradation long enough to become fossilized.
Further, morphometric comparisons of acid-hydrolyzed remains of extant early-divergent bryophytes and microfossils hypothesized to be the remains of early land plants suggested possible bryophyte-like origins of some enigmatic Ordovician, Silurian, and Devonian microfossils. For example, acid-hydrolyzed sporangial epidermis remains of the early-divergent moss Sphagnum (Kroken, Graham, and Cook, 1996
) and the early-divergent liverwort Sphaerocarpos (Graham and Gray, in press
) closely resembled mid-late Ordovician scraps described by Gray, Massa, and Boucot (1982)
. Sporangial epidermis of other liverworts yielded acid-hydrolysis-resistant remains that resembled Silurian-Devonian tubes and cell sheets (Kroken, Graham, and Cook, 1996
).
These results, together with molecular data, strongly support the concept that: (1) earliest land plants resembled modern bryophytes, (2) bryophyte-like land plants predated the earliest polysporangiophytes and vascular plants, and (3) terrestrial embryophytes were present by the early-middle Ordovician (Strother, Al-Hajri, and Traverse, 1996
). In this study, we extended the neontological-paleontological approach to another early-divergent moss, Polytrichum, comparing certain of its acid-hydrolysis resistant tissues to early Paleozoic microfossils whose source has previously been uncertain. Our proximate goal was to illuminate the origin of such remains and our ultimate goal to assess the relative importance of bryophytes in the early history of land plants.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
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Moss tissues were acid hydrolyzed in 15-mL Eppendorf tubes having three holes in the caps to allow for gas escape during boiling. Holes were made by heating a dissecting needle in a flame, then touching it to the cap of a closed tube. (In performing this procedure, care should be taken not to breathe volatilized plastic vapors.) Perforation of caps prevented opening of tubes (due to expanding gases) and entry of boiling water that would dilute the acid mixture.
Samples were dehydrated with glacial acetic acid for 510 min, then centrifuged. The glacial acetic acid was pipetted off, then a 9:1 v/v solution of acetic anhydride and concentrated sulfuric acid was added to samples. The volumetric proportion of plant material to acid mixture was at least 50:1 as recommended by Good and Chapman (1978)
. Tubes were floated in a beaker of boiling water for at least 20 min, until the acid-plant mixture turned opaque and dark brown. Tubes were then centrifuged for 34 min at a moderate speed sufficient to sediment remains without packing them tightly at the bottom. The supernatant was removed, and the surviving material was washed with glacial acetic acid and centrifuged. The glacial acetic acid was then removed and the remains stored in distilled water at room temperature.
Microscopic observations were performed with a Zeiss Axioplan fluorescence microscope fitted with NEOFLUAR objectives, an HBO (50-W mercury) light source, and filter packs G365 FT395 LP 420 (ultraviolet: number 48 777 02) and 395440 Ft 460 LP 470 (violet: number 444448 77 05) for excitation wavelengths of 365 nm and 395440 nm. For scanning electron microscopy (SEM), surviving tissue scraps of Polytrichum ohioense were attached to an aluminum stub by double-sticky tape and gold coated. Remains of Polytrichum commune were transfered by pipette to a glass coverslip and dried on a hot plate for 510 min on low heat. The glass coverslips were attached to an aluminum stub by double sticky tape and then gold coated. Accelerating voltage was 15 kV. SEM micrographs of acid-hydrolyzed Polytrichum calyptras and original images of Late Silurian or Lower Devonian microfossils that had been published previously were digitally scanned and printed side by side for comparative analysis. Though replicate measurements of the dimensions of extant materials were made, and analogous measurements were performed on images of individual fossils, statistical comparison could not be performed because replicate fossils were not available.
| RESULTS |
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Calyptra remains from P. ohioense and P. commune were very similar in that both primarily consisted of long, hollow, branched tubes. Cells at the exterior of an intact calyptra (Fig. 1) were segmented branched tubes. Tubular structure was maintained after hydrolysis, though overall integrity of the calyptra was lost (Fig. 2). Acid-hydrolyzed tubes tended to aggregate into tangled masses (Fig. 3). Individual tubes had smooth outer and inner walls (Figs. 5 and 7) that were thickened at joints between cells and at branch points (Fig. 5). Branching invariably occurred at an acute angle.
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Polytrichum calyptras exposed to soil microorganisms for 21 d remained intact, though they underwent a color change from very light tan to a golden brown or black color. A similar color change was observed in calyptra remains resulting from high-temperature acid hydrolysis. Microbe-exposed calyptras autofluoresced yellow-green in violet and blue-white in UV excitation, as did those exposed to high-temperature acid hydrolysis.
| DISCUSSION |
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High-temperature acid-hydrolysis-resistance of seta and calyptra, observed in this study of Polytrichum, has not been previously reported. The pseudosetae of Sphagnum and evanescent setae of Lophocolea were not resistant to acid hydrolysis (Kroken, Graham, and Cook, 1996
). Of the Polytrichum remains observed in this study, only those of the calyptra bore significant resemblance to photographs of enigmatic microfossils previously published by Edwards (1979, 1982)
, Edwards, Duckett, and Richardson (1995)
, Gensel, Johnson, and Strother (1990)
, and Wellman (1995)
. Morphological and size similarities between the acid-hydrolyzed remains of extant Polytrichum and certain smooth-walled, branched tubular microfossils suggest that a calyptra-producing ancestor of modern Polytrichum could have been the source of the microfossils.
Molecular phylogenetic studies indicate that polytrichaceous mosses diverged relatively early within the monophyletic lineage represented by extant Musci, but later than Sphagnum and liverworts (Lewis, Mishler, and Vilgalys, 1997
; Hyvönen et al., 1998
). This may explain the appearance of smooth- walled, branched, tubular microfossils later in the fossil record (Silurian-Early Devonian) than the Ordovician microfossils that have been linked to liverwort and Sphagnum hydrolysis remains (Kroken, Graham, and Cook, 1996
; Graham and Gray, in press).
The facts that (1) much of the Polytrichum thallus was recovered after high-temperature acetolysis, (2) the autofluorescence properties of moss remains resemble those of other resistant tissues, and (3) calyptras are resistant to microbial decay imply that cell walls of this moss are highly impregnated with polyphenolic compounds that decrease decay potential. Similarly autofluorescent walls of the desmid Staurastum (a member of the Charophyceae, the green algal lineage most closely related to land plants) contain polyphenolics that are both microbe-resistant (Gunnison and Alexander, 1975a, b
) and acid-hydrolysis resistant (Kroken, Graham, and Cook, 1996
). The latter authors argued that bryophytes inherited the capacity for production of autofluorescent, wall-bound polyphenolic compounds from charophycean ancestors, expressing them in tissues where protection from microbial decay was likely to have adaptive value. Because the calyptra is believed to function as protection for the developing sporophyte, production of polyphenolic wall compounds in this structure may have had adaptive value for early mosses.
This study also suggests a new interpretation for the source of at least some of the Paleozoic smooth-walled, branched, tubular microfossils whose provenance has not been identified or have been previously regarded as possible fungal remains [see review of Paleozoic microfossils, including tubes, by Gensel, Johnson, and Strother (1990)
]. Edwards (1982)
suggested that some of the Paleozoic tubes are remains of Nematothallus (Lang, 1937
), a genus of Paleozoic fossil plant- like organisms (nematophytes) that lack modern representatives. Wellman (1995)
noted that fossil tubes found in nonmarine deposits were likely terrestrial or freshwater in origin, and that they could have been derived from many sources including land plants, fungi, algae, or previously undocumented organisms.
Based on the evidence presented here, we suggest that at least some of the smooth-walled, branched, tubular microfossils known from the early Paleozoic represent calyptral remains of early mosses. This interpretation is supported by: (1) morphological similarity, (2) size similarity, and (3) resistant properties of both microfossils and extant Polytrichum calyptras. Our results suggest that correlation between other enigmatic microfossils and hydrolysis-resistant remains of extant bryophytes may be possible.
| FOOTNOTES |
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2 Author for reprint requests (Tel: 608/262-2640; FAX: 608/262-7509; e-mail: lkgraham{at}facstaff.wisc.edu
) ![]()
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