Nomenclatural Status Of The Palaeobotanical “ Artificial Taxa ” Established In Brongniart’S 1822 “ Classification ” Paper
Author
Cleal, Christopher J.
Department of Biodiversity and Systematic Biology, National Museum Wales, Cathays Park, Cardiff CF 10 3 NP, United Kingdom; e-mail: chris. cleal @ museumwales. ac. uk.
Author
Thomas, Barry A.
Institute of Biological, Environmental and Rural Sciences, Aberystwyth University, Penglais, Aberystwyth, Ceredigion, SY 201 NL, United Kingdom; e-mail: bat @ aber. ac. uk.
bat@aber.ac.uk.
text
Fossil Imprint
2018
2018-08-31
74
1 - 2
9
28
journal article
10.2478/if-2018-0001
2533-4069
4586465
Filicites
sect.
Pecopteris
BRONGNIART
Text-fig. 1
g–i
1822a
Filicites
(
Pecopteris
) BRONGNIART
, p. 233.
1825
Pecopteris
(
BRONGNIART) STERNBERG, Tentamen
p. xvii.
Ty p e.
Filicites
(sect.
Pecopteris
)
penniformis
BRONGNIART, 1822a
, p. 233
, pl. 2, fig. 3; Loc. Middle Pennsylvanian Series, Dudweiler, near Saarbrücken,
Germany
(vide
Brongniart 1836: 345
); ≡
Pecopteris penniformis
(BRONGNIART)
BRONGNIART, 1828a
.
D i a g n o s i s. “la fronde est pinnatifide à pinnules adherents par leur base au rachis, transversée par une nervure médiane et à nervures secondaires pennées.”
D i s c u s s i o n. When
Sternberg (1825)
raised this species in rank to genus, he illegitimately renamed the
type
species
Pecopteris pennata
STERNBERG, 1825
, but this name must be supressed as a later homotypic synonym. In the original definition of
Brongniart (1822a)
this name was used for both fern and seed-plant fronds. However, mainly through the separation off of species with larger pinnules such as
Alethopteris
STERNBERG, 1825
, and
Callipteridium
(E. WEISS) GRAND’ EURY, 1877 (≡
Odontopteris
(
Callipteridium
) E.
WEISS, 1870
) the name has become almost exclusively used for Palaeozoic fern foliage. Only fronds of the seedplant family
Callistophytaceae
STIDD et HALL, 1970
, have occasionally still been referred to
Pecopteris
, but even this is nowadays unusual; such fronds are normally now referred to
Dicksonites
STERZEL, 1881
.
Most Palaeozoic pecopteroid foliage belong to two families: the
Psaroniaceae UNGER ex
ENDLICHER, 1842
, (
Marattiales
) and
Tedeleaceae
EGGERT et TAYLOR, 1966
, (Botryopteridales). The
type
of
Pecopteris
unequivocally belongs to the family today usually referred to as the
Tedeleaceae
and so the name should be restricted to species belonging to that family, most notably
P. penniformis
,
Pecopteris plumosa
(ARTIS)
BRONGNIART, 1836
(≡
Filicites plumosus
ARTIS, 1825
) and
Pecopteris volkmannii
SAUVEUR, 1848
. These species have in the past been placed in a separate fossil-genus based on the distinctive soral structures, variously named
Senftenbergia
CORDA, 1845
and
Dactylotheca
ZEILLER, 1883
, but (as pointed out by
Cleal 2015
) these names should be supressed as later taxonomic synonyms of
Pecopteris
.
On this basis,
Pecopteris
should not be used for species that are demonstrably attributable to the
Psaroniaceae
. Most of the well-established
Psaroniaceae
fossil-species can be assigned to one or other of the fossil-genera that are based on a combination of pinnule morphology and venation, and sporangial form (as summarised in
Cleal 2015
).