Early Coal Swamp Vegetation From The Serpukhovian Lower Clackmannan Group Of Scotland
Author
Cleal, Christopher J.
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, BS 8 1 TQ, United Kingdom; email: christopher. cleal @ bristol. ac. uk.
Author
Strullu-Derrien, Christine
Institut de Systématique, Évolution, Biodiversité (UMR 7205), Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle, CNRS, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France. & Science Group, The Natural History Museum, London, United Kingdom.
Author
Spencer, Alan R. T.
Department of Earth Sciences, The Natural History Museum, London, United Kingdom. & Department of Earth Science and Engineering, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
text
Fossil Imprint
2024
2024-11-18
80
1
35
67
journal article
10.37520/fi.2024.006
2533-4069
14722393
Sphenophyllum tenerrimum
ETTINGSH
. ex
HELMHACKER
, 1874
emend. by
Stur (1877)
Text-fig. 6a
1874
Sphenophyllum tenerrimum
ETTINGSH
. ex
HELMHACKER
, p. 50, pl. 3, figs 5–16.
1877
Sphenophyllum tenerrimum
ETTINGSH
. ex
HELMHACKER
; Stur, p. 108, pl. 7, figs 1–14. (?Ettingshausen’s
types
)
1969
Sphenophyllum tenerrimum
ETTINGSH
. ex
HELMHACKER
; Crookall, p. 602, pl. 108, fig. 6.
D e s c r i p t i o n. Ribbed stems with whorls of 9–12 leaves borne at about right-angles in proximal part of stem, but more obliquely in more distal positions. Leaves
3–10 mm
long, deeply incised into 2–4 narrow-linear, splayed segments, the incisions usually extending about a half of the leaf length, each segment with a blunt apex. Occasionally the leaf segments divide for a second time. Leaf surface striate.
R e m a r k s. This is the most commonly-reported
Sphenophyllum
species
found in lower Namurian macrofloras and is easily recognised by its whorls of deeply-incised leaves with splayed segments (e.g.,
Storch 1980
,
Havlena 1982
,
Terreaux de Felice et al. 2019
). However, there are nomenclatural issues with the species epithet. According to
Stur (1877)
it was first used in manuscript but not published by Ettingshausen in 1853, and was mentioned by Stur (in
Foetterle 1868: 50
) in a species list but without description or illustration. The name
S. tenerrimum
was first validly used by
Helmhacker (1874)
who included a description and illustrated several specimens, although most of those specimens are now reported lost (
Jongmans 1911
). Nevertheless, Helmhacker made clear reference to Ettingshausen’s specimens, which were later illustrated by
Stur (1877)
, and so these can be legitimately taken as
syntypes
; Helmhaker’s publication of the name was therefore valid.
An added complication is that
Helmhacker (1873)
had earlier referred to the specimens he figured in his 1874a paper as
Sphenophyllum binatum
HELMACKER
. However
, this was a nomen nudum with no accompanying description or illustration, and so invalid.
This species is very similar to the upper Carboniferous
Sphenophyllum trichomatosum
STUR
, but the leaves of the latter have segments with a more acute apex and the leaf surface tends to be smooth (non-striate) (
Jongmans 1911
).
O c c u r r e n c e. Ca.
10 m
below Orchard Limestone, (Upper Limestone Formation), Robroyston Colliery, Lanarkshire.