Title of article :
Anatomically preserved Liquidambar (Altingiaceae) from the middle Miocene of Yakima Canyon, Washington state, USA, and its biogeographic implications
Author/Authors :
Pigg، Kathleen B. نويسنده , , Wen، Jun نويسنده , , Ickert-Bond، Stefanie M. نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages :
-498
From page :
499
To page :
0
Abstract :
Liquidambar changii Pigg, Ickert-Bond & Wen sp. nov. (Altingiaceae) is established for anatomically preserved, middle Miocene infructescences from Yakima Canyon, Washington, USA. Specimens are spherical, ~25-30 tightly packed, bilocular fruits per head. Fruits are 3.4-4.7 mm wide x 2.6-3.5 mm long and wedge shaped, fused at the base, and free distally. Each locule contains 1-2 mature, elongate seeds proximally and 5-9 aborted seeds of more irregular shape distally. Mature seeds are 1.5 mm long x 1.2 mm wide, elongate, and triangular transversely, with a slight flange. Seeds have a seed coat for which three zones can be well defined, a uniseriate outer palisade layer, a middle region of isodiametric cells comprising most of the integument, and a uniseriate inner layer of tangentially elongate cells lining the embryo cavity. Liquidambar changii is most similar to the eastern Asian L. acalycina H.-T. Chang on features of infructescence, fruit, and seed morphology and quite unlike the North American L. styraciflua L. and other species. Such a close relationship between these two species supports a Beringian biogeographic track between eastern Asia and western North America during the Miocene. Previous phylogenetic and allozyme analysis of modern Liquidambar demonstrates a close relationship between North American-western Asian taxa and suggests a North Atlantic biogeographic track in the middle Miocene. Together, these biogeographic tracks underscore the complexity of the biogeographic history of the Altingiaceae in the Northern Hemisphere throughout the Neogene.
Keywords :
Altingia , Altingiaceae , fossil fruit , Miocene , silicification , biogeography , infructescence , Liquidambar
Journal title :
American Journal of Botany
Serial Year :
2004
Journal title :
American Journal of Botany
Record number :
33691
Link To Document :
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