ebook img

A FOSSIL FLOWER OF THE GENUS PROTIUM (BURSERACEAE) IN MID-TERTIARY AMBER FROM THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC PDF

2013·3.5 MB·English
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview A FOSSIL FLOWER OF THE GENUS PROTIUM (BURSERACEAE) IN MID-TERTIARY AMBER FROM THE DOMINICAN REPUBLIC

FLOWER OF PROTIUM (BURSERACEAE) IN FOSSIL 1 5 AMB DOMINICAN REPUBLIC MID-TERTIARY :HE George O. Poinar, Jr. Journal of the Botanical Research Institute of Texas 7(1) Mam Lower Miocene Group The amber e to y (Draper et al. 1994). age of the is controversial, the oldest dates being 45-30 Ma, based on (Cepek and i coccoliths in Schlee 1999), the youngest being 20-15 Ma, & n foraminifera MacPhee (Iturralde-Vinent 1966). HISPANIOLA. Dominican e: 1 Oregon It State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, U.S.A.). mm n fully developed petals) 6.0 a (Figs. 1, 2), mm lyx glabrous, cupular long mm, (Fig. 4), 1.4 overall, sepals connate, the fused portion 1.0 the lobes broadly mm mm triangular, acute, 0.4 long, 0.7 wide at base; petals 5 (1 missing and 1 truncated near base), lanceolate mm from broad a base, acute, spreading, portion distal recurved, length 2.4 including the recurved part, the tip inflexed margin (Fig. 4), papillate (Fig. 4), abaxial surface glabrous, adaxial surface minutely papillate; stamens strongly incurved, 2 10, of different lengths, the antepetalous ones up mm, to 1.1 the antesepalous ones up to mm, mm 0.9 anthers lance-linear, basifixed (Fig. 2), 0.5 long, laterally dehiscent; disc intrastaminal, glabrous, mm mm annular, swollen, 1.7 in diameter, the central depression 0.7 in diameter, occupied by a reduced pistil- mm lode ovary (Fig. ovoid, glabrous, 2), ca. 5-lobed, style fused, stout, 0.15 long, distally 10-lobed or sulcate mm (Figs. floral pedicel 1, 2), papillate at base, otherwise glabrous, 2.8 long (Fig. 3). Etymology.—From Greek and “kallos,” beauty, “anthos,” flower. DISCUSSION may Petals of Protium be either erect or reflexed at anthesis (Engler and 1931), the fossil is in the latter category. Petals are vanously glabrous or pubescent in the genus, e.g., villous abaxially and adaxially in alvarevcmm P. & Daly Fine and P. adaxially short-papillate in P. caroknse Daly. The fossil resembles the latter species in this respect as well as in widely its recurved petals, but differs in other 5-merous versus features flowers (e.g., The 4-merous). form of calyx seen in callianthum P. is well represented many of in the genus, as described for its by species Swart Anthers (1942). with basal rather than common dorsal insertion are in the genus and charac- tenze callianthum P. (Figs. They 2, 3). are illustrated for P. altsonu Sandw., bahianum Daly, and others (Daly P. 1989 Stammate 1992a). flowers possessing a thick intrastaminal whose a disc depression contains te- central common b<Mmm r“‘T Pfe'il. In Prolinm of (see ffluslrations P. mom IDaly 1992a| as well as Daly and P. other taxa [Daly The Par I992bl). ease with which keys to the fossil hum onnoral traits (Swartl942; Daly etal.2011).as well as men. its Similarity to the various illustrated taxa tioned above, strongly support assignment its to this genus Several features of the fossil are worth noting. Papillate margins hetweea the allow fusion postgenital valvate petals before they finally m separate at anthesis. This occurs imerd^tion through papillae, of the xplained by Bachelier and A Endress (2009). si not which mention, is they also 1 , was notedforPrmiummorii by BacheherandEtnhess 2009 from noralbud'cr^s^s^cinrHowevert^ ( ) rom ers e escnption of tbe t species by Daly who mm (1992), gives 1.7-1.83 and 1.85-2.05 for the antepetal- mtes,mlousones,respectively.Other species forwhichthedescriptions mention ous than an,tteepneettaallo™u,ss p & fm p The dvareziamm (Daly Fine 2011). quency, in Protium, of the inoe Tribe Prot urotieae Protium (the Alliance per Daly D et al 1201 i« , j j mnlecular 1 ii t • .^s(Clarksonetal.2002;Weeksetal.‘’2005;{h:it::r]:;:r^^^^^ .bywhichtodistingnisham„ngthe7:rra'?™;tir^™ and Poinar,/ Chambers 1908) (Solereder trichomes snaU-shaped genus Crepidospermum by the lack of anth^ the thefossilinhaving usually differsLnxProtL and from m an owers, staminate “ovariodisc” conical uients, the disc and fused into a pistillode nate (Daly 1989). r., uv, . . FoUowi„gh.descrtp«o„otPr..u™car„,e„«,D,V(~ m majontyo Ulsect on He found that a that feeds the flowers. ^ Other remaininenerianth the f » whicheatstheinterioroftheflowerbutdoesnotpreventregularenlargement . ...yi^of amber con- with no colleaiomof have developing fruits the species and stamens top of ,he ^tningthe type ofP. fossil Whether the ofsome kind. posstblybyanh*^^^ •hedisc and have been eaten, quite pistilseen. to ^^^ charac have might also carolense ‘usect/flower described for relationship P. «nknown,butitdeservesn.entionforitspossiblebottm^ Protimn from other callianlltum is distinct « from Republic but differs P, culli- D„„i„ican mo^tn Urb., m species gluucescens of Protium, 4-merous P. have Cuba also endemic 5-merous,flow^^The^ »*«tn than 4-merous, rather its op wttna t- Anulies, Lesser »»»ers, while Urb, of the attetmutum (Rose) P. a™ 5-lobed in its ovate, dotsifixedanthetsand De-Nova 2012; et al. (Becerra et al. The two Pbylo8'«“”“^'““f®";:^'::“;es most molecular Weeks recent 2002; etal. (Clarkson beyon go p ^912), although genus Bursera, emphasizing the 1 372 2005; Thulin et al. 2008) by increasing the number of sampled species and proposing time-calibrated phylog- enies of the family. According to the calculations of Becerra et (op. Burseraceae are over 92 Ma al. cit.), old, and many modem Ma the evolutionary proliferation of genera occurred in the period of 30±10 (their Fig. 3, p. 339). De-Nova et al. (op. however, give the age of the family’s crown group as 64.92 (60.33-69.67) Ma and cit.), of the crown Bursera group as 49.43 (45.38-53.77) Ma. In a phylogenetic study of Protium by Fine (under et al. review), the split between this genus and Bursera is dated as ca. 52 Ma, and the diversification of the Protium clade be- gins ca. 20 Ma. The deposits of amber from the Dominican Republic are not precisely dated (see Materials and Methods), the youngest estimate being 20-15 Ma. The which large clade to callianthum probably P. belongs, among containing, others, the extant Caribbean species of Protium, diverged around 15 Ma, a figure that would clearly favor the younger of the 2 estimates for the age of the amber. Protium callianthum may be still on older, the stem of this clade, since has no synapomorphies match it that those in the larger, inclusive clade (P.Fine,pers. comm.). ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We thank David Harris for his taxonomic advice and Peter Endress for pointing us in the direction of an ap- propriate systematic placement for the fossil. Douglas Daly and Paul Fine provided valuable review comments and suggestions, as well as information from unpublished Brown made research. Alex kindly available the by tise Swart. REFERENCES Bacheuer, J.B. AND RK. Endress. 2009. Comparative floral morphology and anatomy of Anacardiaceae and B (Sapindales), with a special focus on gynoecium structure and evolution. 159:499-571. Bot. Linn. Soc. J. JX, Becerra, K. Noge, Ouvier, and D.L S. Venable. 2012. The Burseraceae. Taxon 61:333-343. Chambers, K. L. and G.O. Poinar, Jr. 2010. The Dominican amber fossil Lasiambix (Fabaceae: Caesalpinioideae?) is (Chrysobalanaceae). Bot J. Res. Inst. Texas 4:217-218. Chambers, K.L, G.O. Poinar, Jr., and A.E. Brown. 2 flower of Dominic il Perseo (Laurat n Tertiary Bot. Res. Inst. Texas 5:457-462. Mid-Tertiary Bot '' fossil flower of Swietenia Dominican amber. ^ (Meliaceae) J. in „ Res. .Inst Texas 23-1 6:1 27. ChwK.UG.O. Poinar, AND Jr., A.S.CHANDERBAU. 2012. Mid- Trepfosfemon(Lauraceae),anew from genus of flower fossil Dominican Tertiary amber. J. Bot. Res. Texas 6551-556 Inst. M.W. Clarkson, JJ., Chase, AND M.I Kew sequences. 57:183- Bull. Daly, D.C. 1989. Studies in neotropical Burseraceae. Generic Brittonia II and Canarieae. i Protieae 41:17-27. Two new Daly, D.C. 1992a. taxa of Protium from eastern Brazi 713-719. New Daly, D.C. 1992b. taxa and combinations in Protium Bur 44:280-299. Two new Daly, D.C. 1998. species of Protium from French Gui enuu... n neotropical Burseraceae Vlii. 50:517-523. M.M. Daly, D.C., Harley, M.-C. MarUnez-Habibe, and A. Weeks of 201 genera and Families In: K. Kubitzki, ed. iring plar Daly, D.C. AT lialistand generali: Studies in neotropical Burseraceae XVI. Syst. Bot. 36:939-949. De-Nova, J., historical construction of Mesoai^^n species-rich ti^’llv d^r^T*^' Tf New (Burseraceae, Sapindales). Phytol. 193:276-287. . 99^ Mann, and Lewis. Draper, G., P- J.F. 1 West of the University tion.The Ir Engler,A.1931.E 405-456. Pp. Leipzig. FZ Zapata, and D.C. Daly (In Review). The evolution ai P.V.A., Fine, important lineage of tropical rain forest trees. Evolution. Age and paleogeographic origin of C M.A. and R.D.E. MacPhee. 1966. Iturralde-Vinent, 1850-1852. amber from Dominican has ]99^.Hymenaea (Leguminosae: Caesalpinioideae) protera sp.n. j PoiNAR, G.O., Jr. 075-1 082. Experientia 47:1 finities. Princeton, NJ. The amber Princeton University Press, G.O., and Poinar. 999. forest. PoiNAR, Jr. R. 1 38:57-61 palm Dominican and Mexican amber. Bot. J. Linn. Soc. 1 2002a. flowers in G.O., Fossil PoiNAR, Jr. -367. 39:361 palm Dominican and Baltic amber. Bot. J. Linn. Soc. 1 2002b. flowers in Poinar, G.O., Jr. Fossil dominicensis gen. and sp. nov., a eudicot flower 2008a. Lasiambix i G.O., K.L Chambers, and A.E. Brown. PfflNAR, Jr., 2:463^ Texas Bot. Res. Inst. Caesalpinioideae. amber showing with Fabaceae subfamily J. • can affinities Poinar, G.O., K.L Chambers, and A.E. Brown. Jr., 67-1 73. Texas cence Dominican amber. Bot. Res. Inst. 2:1 1 1 in J. ScHLEE, D. 1999. Das Bernstein-Kabinett. Stu1 Clarendon Press, Vol.l. SOEREDER, 908. Systematic ani Ft. 1 2001 o Stevens, P.F. Swart, JJ. 1942. A monograph of the genus Protium a 39:211-446. Madagascar, the position n Ambilobea. a 2008. and Banks. Thuun, M., B-A. Beier, S.G. Razafinandimbison, H.I. of the frankince of Aucoumea, and comments on the tribal classification Bot. 26:21 8-229. J. 51:165-195. Blumea Anacardiaceae. in IS

See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.