The Late Early Pleistocene Flora Of Oriolo, Faenza (Italy): Assembly Of The Modern Forest Biome
Author
Denk, Thomas
Author
Sami, Marco
Author
Teodoridis, Vasilis
Author
Martinetto, Edoardo
text
Fossil Imprint
2022
2022-08-26
78
1
217
262
http://dx.doi.org/10.37520/fi.2022.009
journal article
10.37520/fi.2022.009
2533-4069
7167867
Berberis auriolensis
DENK et SAMI
sp. nov.
Text-fig. 3a–e
2001
Berberis
sp.
; Martinetto and Sami, p. 20, text-fig. 12.
M a t e r i a l. Oriolo MSF 644, 784, 788, 789, 790-1, 791, 792, 793, 794, 795?;
Santa Lucia
delle Spianate MSF n.n., Tebano MSF n.n.
H o l o t y p e. Here designated
MSF 644
;
paratypes
MSF 784, 788, 789, 790-1, 791, 792, 793, 794.
P l a n t F o s s i l N a m e s R e g i s t r y N u m b e r.
PFN002946.
D i a g n o s i s. Leaf, petiolate, lamina obovate or elliptical, micro to notophyll, base long cuneate, apex rounded, secondary venation brochidodromous, three distinct loops and secondary loops, margin subentire or dentate.
E t y m o l o g y. The species name derives from the village Oriolo, the medieval name of which was Auriolus.
T y p e l o c a l i t y. Oriolo, Salita di Oriolo quarry,
Italy
. T y p e s t r a t u m a n d a g e. “Sabbie gialle” cycle I, latest Calabrian.
D e s c r i p t i o n. Leaf, petiolate, petiole
3–5 mm
, lamina obovate or elliptical,
46–66 mm
long,
27–43 mm
wide, base acute, cuneate, apex rounded or bluntly acute, secondary venation distinctly brochidodromous, 3 main loops followed by secondary loops towards lamina margin, small veins entering teeth or forming marginal loops, margin appearing bent downward in some specimens and hence teeth obscured, ca. 5 teeth per
10 mm
margin, teeth with long basal and short apical side.
R e m a r k s. The leaves from Oriolo superficially resemble the European extant species
B
.
vulgaris
L., 1753. However, in the latter, the lobing of the secondary veins is steeper and the brochidodromous venation is generally less conspicuous. Dentition is variable in
B
.
vulgaris
, and the condition as found in the leaves from Oriolo is also met in living plants. In terms of leaf size, shape, and secondary venation, the northeastern Asian
B
.
amurensis
RUPR., 1857
, is very similar to the fossil leaves (
Text-fig. 3f
), whereas
Berberis koreana
PALIB., 1899
, from
Korea
, and
B
.
canadensis
MILL., 1768
, from North America are more similar in features of the leaf margin (
Text-fig.
3g
, h
). These extant species belong to a modern clade comprising European, Asian and North American species (clade 5 of
Adhikari et al. 2015
). Remarkably, this clade also contains several narrow endemic relic species in western Eurasia (e.g.,
B
.
aetnensis
C.PRESL, 1826
,
B
.
cretica
L., 1753,
B
.
maderensis
LOWE, 1856
).
Givulescu and Olos (1973)
described
Berberis goinai
GIVUL. et OLOS, 1973
from Late Miocene strata of
Romania
(Chiuzbaia). This fossil species is based on a single leaf that is similar to some specimens from Oriolo (obvate leaf, entire margin in basal part of the lamina, few teeth in apical part). However, as in
B
.
vulgaris
, the loops formed by the secondary veins are steeper and do not reach close to the margin, as they do in the specimens from Oriolo. Consequently, the fossil taxon from Oriolo is here described as a new species.