Early Cretaceous angiosperm leaves from the Dakota Formation, Hoisington III locality, Kansas, USA
Author
Wang, Hongshan
Author
Dilcher, David L.
text
Palaeontologia Electronica
2018
34 A
2018-09-30
21
3
1
49
http://dx.doi.org/10.26879/841
journal article
10.26879/841
1094-8074
11062827
Pabiania variloba
Upchurch and Dilcher, 1990
Figures 7-8
v. 1981a
Acerites multiformis
Lesquereux
; Retallack and Dilcher, 1981a, p. 38, fig. 2.4.
Description.
Leaf commonly trilobate, rarely bilobate or unlobed; base ranging from acute to obtuse and tending towards cuneate, with the basalmost portion of the lamina decurrent on the petiole; margin entire; apex of lobes acute to rounded; unlobed leaves broad elliptic to obovate, with rounded apex. Primary venation basal to suprabasal actinodromous in 3-lobed leaves, pinnate in unlobed leaves; midvein moderate; lateral primary veins similar to midvein in thickness, at lower angle than superadjacent secondary veins and tending to be recurved, commonly decurrent on midvein, producing one to three festooned brochidodromous external branches. Secondary venation festooned brochidodromous; secondary veins thin or moderate relative to primary veins, three to six pairs along midvein, with one pair of basilaminar secondary veins present in all leaves, alternate, moderate acute, straight to apically curved, tending to be festooned brochidodromous except near sinuses. Tertiary venation reticulate; tertiary veins thin relative to secondary veins, opposite to alternate, closely but somewhat irregularly spaced, originating at acute to right angles. Quaternary venation intergrading with tertiary veins, generally unbranched; quaternary veins opposite to alternate, non-orthogonal, enclosing somewhat elongate, 4-sided regions. Quinternary venation highly irregular, both ramified and reticulate, arising both from thick lateral branches of the quaternary veins and from the sides of lower order veins; quinternary veins weak, curved, often producing branches to form an open venation. Areolation poorly developed. Marginal venation consisting of a thin fimbrial vein.
Number of specimens examined.
90.
Specimens illustrated.
UF
15706-24423 (
Figure 7.1-3
); 30154 (
Figure 7.4-5
); 14832 (
Figure 7.6
); 14823 (
Figure 8.1
); 24464 (
Figure 8.2, 8.4
); 24587 (
Figure 8.3
).
Occurrences.
Rose Creek
locality,
Nebraska
and Hoisington III locality,
Kansas
.
Remarks.
In Upchurch and Dilcher’s (1990) diagnosis and description of this species, the primary venation was described as palinactinodromous. Observations based on Hoisington III locality specimens indicate that the primary venation of
P. variloba
can vary from basal actinodromous (
Figure 8.1
), suprabasal actinodromous (
Figure 7.6
), to suprabasal palinactinodromous (
Figure 7.1-3
). The leaves from the Rose Creek locality,
Nebraska
described by Upchurch and Dilcher (1990) and stored at the Paleobotany collection in the
Florida
Museum of Natural History (more than
100 specimens
) are smaller in size compared with the specimens from the Hoisington III locality,
Kansas
. The specimens from the Hoisington III locality also show that the petioles are long and they have winged lamina tissue along both sides. The petiole base may be ocreate (
Figure 7.4, 7.5
). Other variations of leaf morphological characters include: (1) lamina from unlobed (
Figure 8.3
) to trilobed (
Figures 7.1, 7.6
,
8.1-2
); leaf base from acute (
Figure 7.6
) to rounded (
Figure 8.1
); (2) apex of lamina lobes from acute (
Figure 7.6
), rounded (
Figure 7.1
), to mucronate (
Figure 8.2
). All other leaf morphological characters are consistent with those described by Upchurch and Dilcher (1990).
Heer (1883, plate 38, figure 3) and Lesquereux (1892, plate 54, figures 1-3) described a few specimens with similar leaf morphology and assigned them to
Aralia groenlandica
Heer. Unfortunately
, only primary and secondary venation are observed on these leaves, which makes it difficult to compare them with the specimens from the Rose Creek and Hoisington III localities.