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An extinct species of Basella: pollen evidence from sediments (~80 ka) in Kerala,India
Abstract:Abstract

The genus Basella belongs to family Basellaceae and is comprised of five species. Out of these, Basella alba is pantropical in distribution, B. paniculata is endemic to south-eastern Africa and the other three species viz. B. excavata, B. leandriana and B. madagascariensis are endemic to Madagascar. The palynological study of an organic layer buried ~80 ka in Chaganacherry, Kerala revealed a rich diversity of rainforest pollen and estuarine/marine palynomorphs indicating warm and humid climate coupled with sea level high stand. The Basella pollen recorded from this sediment shows intermediate characters of two extant Basella species. While it resembles B. paniculata in being pantocolpate (20), it shows affinity with B. alba in sexine characters. The recovered pollen was therefore, ascertained to be a new species, named here as B. keralensis sp. nov. The age correlation of the studied sediment was carried out by fingerprinting (Rare Earth Elements) of Youngest Toba Tuff (YTT) (glass shards) which spread in the atmosphere through a volcanic eruption in Sumatra ~74 ka and also with marine palynomorph markers correlating the interglacial Marine Isotopic Stage 5a (~80 ka). It is inferred that earlier, the genus Basella comprised of six species out of which Basella keralensis sp. nov. became extinct and until now neither the fossil record nor the extant form of this is known in records from any part of the World.
Keywords:Basella keralensis  southern-Western Ghats  Kerala  late Quaternary
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