Two new fossil flowers of magnoliid affinity from the Late Cretaceous of New Jersey
Open Access
- 1 September 1998
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Botany
- Vol. 85 (9) , 1273-1288
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2446638
Abstract
Two taxa of cupulate magnoliid fossil flowers, Cronquistiflora and Detrusandra, are described from the Late Cretaceous (Turonian, ∼90 million years before present [MYBP]) Raritan (or lower Magothy) Formation of New Jersey. The fossil taxa are represented by flowers at various stages of development, associated fragments of cup-shaped floral receptacles with attached anthers, and isolated anthers. Both taxa have laminar stamens with adaxial thecae and valvate dehiscence. Pollen is boat-shaped and foveolate in anthers associated with Cronquistiflora and spherical with reticulate ornamentation in Detrusandra. Cup-shaped receptacles are externally bracteose in both taxa. The receptacle of Cronquistiflora is broader than the campanulate one of Detrusandra. Cronquistiflora also has more carpels (∼50 in a spiral vs. ∼5 in a whorl or tight spiral). In Detrusandra the carpels are surrounded by dorsiventrally flattened structures (pistillodes?) that are remote from the attachment of the stamens near the distal rim of the receptacular cupule. Detrusandra stigmas are rounded and bilobed, while those of Cronquistiflora, although bilateral in symmetry, are somewhat peltate. The fossil taxa share prominent characters with extant cupulate magnoliids (e.g., Eupomatia, Calycanthus), but also share characters with other magnoliids including Winteraceae. These fossils represent taxa that are character mosaics relative to currently recognized families. Inclusion of these fossils in existing data matrices and ensuing phylogenetic analyses effect changes in tree topologies consistent with their mosaicism relative to modern taxa. But such analyses do not definitively demonstrate the affinities of the fossils other than illustrating that these fossils are generalized magnoliids. Additional analysis of modern and fossil magnoliids is necessary to fully appreciate the phylogenetic significance and positions of these fossil taxa. However, the results of the phylogenetic analyses do introduce the possibility that extinct taxa of Magnoliales with cupulate floral receptacles were transitional between basal angiosperms and those with tricolpate pollen. The fossils provide insights into the timing of evolution of character complexes now associated with coleopteran pollination.Keywords
Funding Information
- National Science Foundation (DEB9420512)
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Virginianthus calycanthoides gen. et sp. nov.-A Calycanthaceous Flower from the Potomac Group (Early Cretaceous) of Eastern North AmericaInternational Journal of Plant Sciences, 1994
- A Reevaluation of Seed Plant PhylogenyAnnals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 1994
- ON OUTGROUPSCladistics, 1993
- CLADISTICS OF THE MAGNOLIIDAECladistics, 1991
- Functions of Staminodia in the Beetle-Pollinated Flowers of Eupomatia laurinaBiotropica, 1990
- Systematic relationships of theLactoridaceae, an endemic family of the Juan Fernandez Islands, ChileÖsterreichische botanische Zeitschrift, 1986
- Archaenthus: An Early Angiosperm From the Cenomanian of the Western Interior of North AmericaAnnals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 1984
- Lesqueria: An Early Angiosperm Fruiting Axis From the Mid-CretaceousAnnals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 1984
- The role of inner staminodes in the floral display of some relicMagnolialesÖsterreichische botanische Zeitschrift, 1984
- Significance of Fossils in Determining Evolutionary RelationshipsAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1981