An extinct genus of Salicaceae based on twigs with attached flowers fruits, and foliage from the Eocene Green River Formation of Utah and Colorado, USA

被引:67
作者
Boucher, LD [1 ]
Manchester, SR
Judd, WS
机构
[1] Univ Nebraska, Dept Biol, Omaha, NE 68182 USA
[2] Univ Florida, Florida Museum Nat Hist, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA
[3] Univ Nebraska, Dept Bot, Omaha, NE 68182 USA
关键词
Eocene; flower; Green River Formation; inflorescence; infructescence; Pseudosalix handleyi; Salicaceae; Utah;
D O I
10.3732/ajb.90.9.1389
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
A newly recovered twig with attached leaves and flowers from the Eocene Green River Formation of Utah provides the basis for recognizing a new, extinct genus of Salicaceae sensu lato (s.l.). Pseudosalix handleyi gen. et sp. nov. has alternate lanceolate leaves with pinnate, semicraspedodromous venation and a serrate margin with glandular teeth. The inflorescence is terminal on the twig and is unisexual. composed of flowers organized in a paniculoid cyme, with lateral paraclades of pedicellate flowers. The attached pistillate flowers have four prominent sepals that are valvate in bud, spreading but basally fused at anthesis; the single pistil of each flower is ovoid with three or four longitudinal sutures, indicating development to a capsular fruit. Three or four recurved styles radiate from the apex of the pistil, each with a distal globose stigma. The infructescence, verified by attachment to twigs with the same kind of leaves, bore capsular fruits of three and four valves. Associated but unattached, staminate flowers also have four well-developed, basally connate sepals. They are pedicellate and bear several stamens, each with a short filament and globose anther. The available morphological characters place the fossil species within the Salicaceae s.l. as an immediate sister to the clade containing Populus and Salix. Although the likely outgroup genera (including Itoa, Poliothyrsis. Carrierea, and Idesia) to tribe Saliceae all occur in Asia today and not North America, the occurrence of both Pseudosalix and Populus in the Eocene of Utah raises the possibility of a North American origin for the Saliceae.
引用
收藏
页码:1389 / 1399
页数:11
相关论文
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