Author/Authors :
Philippe، نويسنده , , Marc and Gomez، نويسنده , , Bernard and Girard، نويسنده , , Vincent and Coiffard، نويسنده , , Clément and Daviero-Gomez، نويسنده , , Véronique and Thevenard، نويسنده , , Frédéric and Billon-Bruyat، نويسنده , , Jean-Paul and Guiomar، نويسنده , , Myette and Latil، نويسنده , , Jean-Louis and Le loeuff، نويسنده , , Jean and Néraudeau، نويسنده , , Didier and Olivero، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The important question of early angiosperm growth habit (i.e., trees, shrubs or herbs?) remains unanswered. Various theories have been based on data from both living and fossil plants. The Early Cretaceous fossil wood record, however, was seldom used to investigate early angiosperm habit. We set up a database for the Early Cretaceous and Cenomanian of Europe, as this area has the most complete and stratigraphically well-constrained record. The database has 170 entries, based on a bibliographical survey and on the examination of more than 600 new fossil wood specimens from a wide range of palaeoenvironments. In our record the woody characteristic in angiosperms appeared during the Albian, whereas most of the angiospermʹs early evolution took place earlier, during the earliest Cretaceous. From the European fossil wood record for the Early Cretaceous and Cenomanian, the global extension and dominance of angiosperms in the Cenomanian is concomitant with a sharp increase in heteroxylous wood diversity. It appears that small stature and weak wood limited the angiosperm ecological radiation for some time.
Keywords :
Fossil wood , Cretaceous , Palaeobotany , Angiosperms , Evolution