Pollen of proteaceous-type from latest Cretaceous sediments, southeastern Australia
- 1 January 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology
- Vol. 20 (2) , 103-160
- https://doi.org/10.1080/03115519608619193
Abstract
Abundant and diverse proteaceous-like triaperturate pollen from Campanian-Maastrichtian sediments in the Otway Basin, southeastern Australia are systematically documented and compared with pollen of extant Proteaceae. Segregation of fossil and extant pollen types has been effected on apertural characters of which six states have been identified. Apertures are colpoid, poroid or porate. Pores of Propylipollis Martin & Harris, 1974 conform with those of subfamilies Grevillioideae and Carnarvonioideae. Colpoids of Beaupreaidites Cookson emend. Martin, 1973, poroids of Lewalanipollis gen. nov., and pores of Cranwellipollis Martin & Harris, 1974 are represented in subfamilies Proteoideae and Persoonioideae. Pores of Proteacidites Cookson ex Couper, 1953 occur in subfamilies Proteoideae and Sphalmioideae. In the Otway Basin fossil record, triporate apertures appear earlier than tricolpoids, triporoids and biporates; and diversity levels of proteaceous pollen are higher than reported from elsewhere implying the region may have been a diversification centre during Campanian and Maastrichtian times. Represented among the fossil pollen are types that conform with pollen of extant Proteaceae: Adenanthos, Beauprea, Beaupreopsis, and Stirlingia (subfamily Proteoideae); Persoonia (subfamily Persoonioideae); Carnarvonia (subfamily Carnarvonioideae); and Bleasdalia, Grevillea, Knightia, Macadamia and Telopea (subfamily Grevillioideae). The Late Cretaceous pollen record thereby implies the presence of sclerophyll and rainforest taxa in a vegetation which was composed of diverse podocarps (Dacrydium, Dacrycarpus, Lagarostrobos, Podocarpus, Microcachrys), araucarians, and a range of angiosperms (Nothofagus, Gunnera, Ilex, Ascarina, Callitriche, Trimeniaceae, Winteraceae, Ranunculaceae and possibly Epacridaceae). Thirty-one pollen species are described and referred to five genera, of which Lewalanipollis is new. New species include Lewalanipollis senectus, L. trycheros, Propylipollis areolatus, P. crotonoides, Proteacidites cooksoniae and Proteacidites variverrucatus.Keywords
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