EARLY CRETACEOUS TETRADS, ZONASULCULATE POLLEN, AND WINTERACEAE. II. CLADISTIC ANALYSIS AND IMPLICATIONS
- 1 December 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in American Journal of Botany
- Vol. 77 (12) , 1558-1568
- https://doi.org/10.1002/j.1537-2197.1990.tb11396.x
Abstract
Comparisons with other fossil pollen types and the distribution of pollen characters in modern angiosperms support affinities of Early Cretaceous ulcerate tetrads (Walkeripollis) and zonasulculate pollen (Afropollis, Schrankipollis) with modern Winteraceae. Cladistic analysis of these fossils plus modern Winteraceae and Illiciales, which have been associated with each other, implies that Afropollis and Schrankipollis represent an extinct sister group of Walkeripollis, Winteraceae, and Illiciales, derived from a common ancestor before origin of the tetrad condition. The single tricolpate grains of Illiciales are derived from ulcerate tetrads, which helps explain their thin proximal exine and Garside's Rule aperture arrangement. These results imply that extinct relatives of Winteraceae and Illiciales were an important component of Early Cretaceous tropical floras and extended into Laurasia, and that the present austral temperate distribution of Winteraceae was attained later. They are consistent with recent suggestions that absence of vessels in Winteraceae is due to secondary loss.Keywords
Funding Information
- National Science Foundation (BSR‐8415772)
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Rainfall patterns and the distribution of coals and evaporites in the Mesozoic and CenozoicPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Angiosperm Diversification and Paleolatitudinal Gradients in Cretaceous Floristic DiversityScience, 1989
- The Importance of Fossils in Phylogeny ReconstructionAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1989
- Lower Cretaceous Angiosperm Flowers: Fossil Evidence on Early Radiation of DicotyledonsScience, 1986
- Floral evidence for Cretaceous chloranthoid angiospermsNature, 1986
- Ultrastructure of Lower Cretaceous Angiosperm Pollen and the Origin and Early Evolution of Flowering PlantsAnnals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 1984
- Winteraceous Pollen in the Lower Cretaceous of Israel: Early Evidence of a Magnolialean Angiosperm FamilyScience, 1983
- Are the Angiosperms Primitively Vesselless?Systematic Botany, 1981
- Angiosperm Biogeography and Past Continental MovementsAnnals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 1974
- Poleward Migration of Early Angiosperm FloraScience, 1959