Lygodium Foliage with Intact Sorophores from the Eocene of Wyoming
- 1 September 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in Botanical Gazette
- Vol. 148 (3) , 392-399
- https://doi.org/10.1086/337668
Abstract
Specimens of Lygodium kaulfussi with attached sorophores and in situ spores from the late Eocene Bridger Formation of Wyoming are described and compared with similar fossil remains from the early Tertiary of other areas in North America, Europe, South America, and Australia. On the basis of the same criteria emphasized in the taxonomy of extant Lygodium species, the Eocene material from Europe and North America represents a single wide-ranging species that was distinct in some features from the Eocene species known from the Southern Hemisphere. Although not identical with any modern species, L. kaulfussi closely resembles extant L. palmatum of eastern North America in having highly dissected nonlaminar fertile pinnae and psilate spores. Strong dimorphism between the sterile and fertile foliage, as occurs in L. kaulfussi and L. palmatum, was widespread in both the Northern and Southern Hemispheres in the Eocene and predates the Neogene appearance of the weakly dimorphic foliage characteristic of most extant Lygodium species.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Revision of the lower Eocene Wilcox flora of the southeastern States, with descriptions of new species, chiefly from Tennessee and KentuckyPublished by US Geological Survey ,1930
- The middle and upper Eocene floras of southeastern North AmericaPublished by US Geological Survey ,1924
- The lower Eocene floras of southeastern North AmericaPublished by US Geological Survey ,1916