The Early Cretaceous Mesofossil Flora Of Catefica, Portugal: Angiosperms
Author
Friis, Else Marie
Author
Crane, Peter R.
Author
Pedersen, Kaj Raunsgaard
Author
Mendes, Mário Miguel
Author
Kvaček, Jiří
text
Fossil Imprint
2022
2022-12-20
78
2
341
424
http://dx.doi.org/10.37520/fi.2022.016
journal article
10.37520/fi.2022.016
2533-4069
7522801
Elasmostemon paisii
E.M.FRIIS, P.R.CRANE, K.R.PEDERSEN, M.M.MENDES et J.KVAČEK
sp. nov.
Text-figs 25a–h
,
26a–c
H o l o t y p e. S105281 (Catefica sample 151; figured
Text-fig. 25d–h
).
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.
PFN002793 (for new species).
P a r a t y p e s. S115859, S172560 (Catefica sample 49).
R e p o s i t o r y. Palaeobotanical Collections, Department of Palaeobiology, Swedish Museum of Natural History,
Stockholm
,
Sweden
(S).
E t y m o l o g y. In honor of Professor João Pais (1949 – 2016) for his contribution to the palaeobotany and geology of
Portugal
.
Ty p e l o c a l i t y. Catefica (
39° 03ʹ30ʺ N
;
09°14ʹ 30ʺ W
), between the villages of
Catefica
and
Mugideira
, about
4 km
south of
Torres Vedras
,
Portugal
.
T y p e s t r a t u m a n d a g e. Almargem Formation,
Early Cretaceous (Aptian-early Albian).
S p e c i f i c d i a g n o s i s.As for the genus.
D i m e n s i o n s. Stamen fragments
0.6–1.7 mm
long
(full length unknown);
0.5–0.7 mm
broad.
D e s c r i p t i o n a n d r e m a r k s. The material comprises two small stamen fragments (S105281 and S115859) that are about
0.6–0.8 mm
long and
0.5 mm
broad (
Text-fig. 25a, d
) and a larger fragment (S172560), about
1.6 mm
and
0.7 mm
broad (
Text-fig. 26a–c
). The three fragments preserve different parts of the stamen, and apparently also slightly different developmental stages. They are treated here as a single species based on the stamen shape, the orientation and positioning of the narrow pollen sacs, and the shared in situ monocolpate, semitectatereticulate pollen (
Text-figs 25a–h
,
26a–c
).
The stamens are broad, tetrasporangiate and dithecate, and abaxially-adaxially flattened. The stamen apex, preserved in specimens S115859 and S172560, is rounded without an apical extension (
Text-figs 25a
,
26a
). The stamen base is not preserved in any of the specimens and the full length of the stamen is unknown. In specimen S115859 the marginal tissue appears to be abraded. The pollen sacs are arranged in two pairs on one surface of the stamen close to the stamen margins. It is unknown whether the pollen sacs are on the abaxial or adaxial stamen surface. The two pairs of pollen sacs are separated from each other by a broad zone of connective tissue but are oriented such that they converge and meet near the stamen apex (
Text-fig. 25a, d
). Dehiscence of the pollen sacs is longitudinal. In the two smaller fragments the thecae are not open, while in the larger specimen the thecae are dehisced with their walls curved back (
Text-fig. 26a
). Larger cells, interpreted as ethereal oil cells, are closely spaced in the staminal tissue and particularly well-preserved in specimen S115859 as shallow depressions surrounded by several cells that produce rounded swellings (
Text-fig. 25a, b
). In the other
two specimens
these cells are obscured by poor preservation.
Text-fig. 22. Scanning electron microscope (SEM, a–c) and synchrotron radiation X-ray tomographic microscopy (SRXTM, d) images of
Ibericarpus cuneiformis
gen. et sp. nov.
; Catefica locality, Portugal. a) Fruiting axis bearing an elongated receptacle with numerous diamond-shaped scars from detached fruitlets; note the absence of scars from bracts, tepals or stamens at the transition to the fruitlet scars and the stalk (arrow); b) Group of ten fruitlets detached from fruiting axis in (a) showing apical stigmatic region and distinctive bulging isodiametric epidermal cells; c) Detached fruitlet showing apical stigmatic region; d) Volume rendering of three adhering fruits showing apical stigmatic region and distinctive bulging isodiametric epidermal cells. Specimens, Catefica MM75-P0477 (a, b), Catefica 49-S115852 (c), Catefica 50-S174907 (d). Scale bars = 300 Μm (a–d).
Mature pollen grains are exposed by fractures in the undehisced, smaller specimens. In the larger, dehisced specimen most of the pollen had been shed, but a group of grains, perhaps immature, remained attached to the inside of the anther wall. Pollen grains of specimen S115859 were described and figured earlier as Pollen
type
D.8 (
Friis et al. 1999
). Grains from specimen S105281 are very similar but folded, which obscures the apertures. The pollen is circular in equatorial view, about 15–17 µm in diameter, and monocolpate. The exine is semitectate-reticulate with a heterobrochate, loosely attached reticulum (
Text-fig. 25c, e–h
). The aperture is long, reaches to the equator, and has distinct margins (
Text-fig. 25e
). Lumina are rounded to angular, with larger lumina up to about 1.6 µm in diameter and smaller lumina about 0.2–0.5 µm in diameter. Muri are narrow, about 0.2 µm wide, with a flattened profile and smooth surface (
Text-fig. 25h
). Columellae are short, about 0.2 µm long (
Text-fig. 25h
).
Text-fig. 23. Synchrotron radiation X-ray tomographic microscopy (SRXTM) images of
Ibericarpus cuneiformis
gen. et sp. nov.
; Catefica locality, Portugal. a) Longitudinal section (orthoslice yz0827) showing fruitlet with apical stigmatic region and a single seed enclosed within the fruitlet wall that has a thick epidermal cuticle; note the tiny embryo (emb) internal to the micropyle (mi) and oriented toward the base of the fruitlet; b) Transverse section through apical part of two fruitlets (orthoslice xy0810) showing the fruitlet wall (fr) composed of small thin-walled cells covered by an epidermis of isodiametric cells (ep) with a thick outer cuticle (cu); c) Longitudinal section (orthoslice xz0370) through basal part of fruitlet perpendicular to section in (a) showing the micropyle (mi), embryo (emb) composed of tiny cells, and the thick cuticle (cu) covering the bulging cells of the fruitlet epidermis. Specimen, Catefica 50-S174907 (a–c). Scale bars = 300 Μm (a–c).
Pollen grains in S172560 vary markedly in size and may be immature but are also partly obscured by residual organic material. They show a gradation, from grains that are almost smooth, to grains with a very weakly developed reticulum (
Text-fig. 26b, c
). Pollen grains in specimen S172560 are also smaller than in the two other specimens, about 12 µm in diameter, and in some grains the reticulum is denser. The inner surface of the anther wall in the dehisced specimen is finely granular, probably reflecting the presence of tiny orbicules.
A
f f i n i t y a n d o t h e r o c c u r r e n c e s.
For
the possible systematic relationships of
Elasmostemon paisii
see comments on the genus above.
The
stamen fragments are closely similar to the specimen described below as “Laminar stamen with monocolpate reticulate pollen”.
However
, the pollen in the two stamen
types
differ in the details of their wall structure.
Similar
stamens have not been encountered in other mesofossil floras from
Portugal
.
Melloniflora
E.M.FRIIS, P.R.
CRANE
et
K
.
R
.PEDERSEN, and several different isolated stamens from the
Early Cretaceous Puddledock
flora of
Virginia
,
USA
, have pollen sacs that are embedded in the staminal tissue in a non-marginal position, but they differ in their larger size and their more elongate, scale-like form (
Friis et al. 2020b
)
.