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Origin and divergence of Afro-Indian Picrodendraceae: linking pollen morphology,dispersal modes,fossil records,molecular dating and paleogeography
Authors:Friðgeir Grímsson  Shirley A Graham  Mario Coiro  Bonnie F Jacobs  Alexandros Xafis  Frank H Neumann
Institution:1. Department of Botany and Biodiversity Research, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria;2. Missouri Botanical Garden, St. Louis, MO, USA;3. Department of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland;4. Roy M. Huffington Department of Earth Sciences, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, TX, USA;5. Department of Paleontology, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria;6. Evolutionary Studies Institute, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa;7. Department of Plant Sciences, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa
Abstract:The pantropical Picrodendraceae produce mostly spheroidal to slightly oblate, echinate pollen grains equipped with narrow circular to elliptic pori that can be hard to identify to family level in both extant and fossil material using light microscopy only. Fossil pollen of the family have been described from the Paleogene of America, Antarctica, Australia, New Zealand, and Europe, but until now none have been reported from Afro-India. Extant pollen described here include representatives from all recent Picrodendraceae genera naturally occurring in Africa and/or Madagascar and south India and selected closely related tropical American taxa. Our analyses, using combined light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy, show that pollen of the Afro-Indian genera encompass three morphological types: Type 1, comprising only Hyaenanche; Type 2, including Aristogeitonia, Mischodon, Oldfieldia and Voatamalo; Type 3, comprising the remaining two genera, Androstachys and Stachyandra. Based on the pollen morphology presented here it is evident that some previous light microscopic accounts of spherical and echinate fossil pollen affiliated with Arecaceae, Asteraceae, Malvaceae, and Myristicaceae from the African continent could belong to Picrodendraceae. The pollen morphology of Picrodendraceae, fossil pollen records, a dated intra-familial phylogeny, seed dispersal modes, and the regional Late Cretaceous to early Cenozoic paleogeography, together suggest the family originated in the Americas and dispersed from southern America across Antarctica and into Australasia. A second dispersal route is believed to have occurred from the Americas into continental Africa via the North Atlantic Land Bridge and Europe.
Keywords:Androstachys  autochory  Aristogeitonia  Hyaenanche  myrmecochory  Oldfieldia  Piranhea  Stachyandra  Tetracoccus  Voatamalo
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