Middle Jurassic evidence for the origin of Cupressaceae: A paleobotanical context for the roles of regulatory genetics and development in the evolution of conifer seed cones
File(s)
Author(s)
Spencer, ART
Mapes, G
Bateman, RM
Hilton, J
Rothwell, GW
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
• Premise of the study: Triassic and Jurassic fossils record structural changes in conifer seed cones through time, provide the earliest evidence for crown-group conifer clades, and further clarify sister-group relationships of modern conifer families. A new and distinct seed-cone from the Isle of Skye in western Scotland provides the oldest detailed evidence for the ancestral morphology of the phylogenetically contentious family Cupressaceae.
• Methods: A single isolated cone was prepared as serial sections by the cellulose acetate peel technique, mounted on microscope slides, and viewed and photographed using transmitted light. The three-dimensional structure of the cone was first reconstructed from the serial sections and then refined through imaging with x-ray microtomography.
• Key results: Scitistrobus duncaanensis, gen. et sp. nov., is a 7.5 mm-diameter cylindrical seed cone with helically arranged bract–scale complexes in which three scale tips separate from a large bract, each tip bearing one adaxial seed. Seeds are near-inverted, show 180° rotational symmetry, and have a diminutive wing in the major plane.
• Conclusions: Scitistrobus duncaanensis extends the fossil record for anatomically preserved seed cones of the Cupressaceae backward from the Upper Jurassic to the Aalenian Stage of the Middle Jurassic. The cone displays a previously unknown combination of characters that we regard as diagnostic for seed cones of early-divergent Cupressaceae and helps to clarify the sequence of structural changes that occurred during the transition from ancestral voltzialean conifers to morphologically recognizable Cupressaceae. Hypotheses of homology underpinning such transformational series can be tested by ongoing reciprocal illumination between the morphology of fossil taxa and the morphogenesis and developmental genetics of their extant crown-group relatives.
• Methods: A single isolated cone was prepared as serial sections by the cellulose acetate peel technique, mounted on microscope slides, and viewed and photographed using transmitted light. The three-dimensional structure of the cone was first reconstructed from the serial sections and then refined through imaging with x-ray microtomography.
• Key results: Scitistrobus duncaanensis, gen. et sp. nov., is a 7.5 mm-diameter cylindrical seed cone with helically arranged bract–scale complexes in which three scale tips separate from a large bract, each tip bearing one adaxial seed. Seeds are near-inverted, show 180° rotational symmetry, and have a diminutive wing in the major plane.
• Conclusions: Scitistrobus duncaanensis extends the fossil record for anatomically preserved seed cones of the Cupressaceae backward from the Upper Jurassic to the Aalenian Stage of the Middle Jurassic. The cone displays a previously unknown combination of characters that we regard as diagnostic for seed cones of early-divergent Cupressaceae and helps to clarify the sequence of structural changes that occurred during the transition from ancestral voltzialean conifers to morphologically recognizable Cupressaceae. Hypotheses of homology underpinning such transformational series can be tested by ongoing reciprocal illumination between the morphology of fossil taxa and the morphogenesis and developmental genetics of their extant crown-group relatives.
Date Issued
2015-06-16
Date Acceptance
2015-05-18
Citation
American Journal of Botany, 2015, 102 (6), pp.942-961
ISSN
1537-2197
Publisher
Botanical Society of America: AJB
Start Page
942
End Page
961
Journal / Book Title
American Journal of Botany
Volume
102
Issue
6
Copyright Statement
© 2015 Spencer et al. Published by the Botanical Society of America.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License (CC-BY).
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License (CC-BY).
License URL
Subjects
Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Plant Sciences
bract-scale complex
Coniferales
Cupressaceae
evolutionary-developmental genetics
fossil seed cone
Middle Jurassic
Voltziaceae
x-ray microtomography
MADS-BOX GENES
PHYLOGENETIC-RELATIONSHIPS
OVULE ONTOGENY
NORTH-CAROLINA
SENSU-LATO
SP NOV.
VOLTZIA-ANDREWSII
BRITISH-COLUMBIA
PLANT PHYLOGENY
REVISED CONCEPT
bract–scale complex
Seeds
Phylogeny
Morphogenesis
Geography
Time Factors
Fossils
Scotland
Biological Evolution
Evolutionary Biology
0607 Plant Biology
0603 Evolutionary Biology
0602 Ecology
Publication Status
Published