ATTACHED REPRODUCTIVE AND VEGETATIVE REMAINS OF THE EXTINCT AMERICAN-EUROPEAN GENUS CEDRELOSPERMUM (ULMACEAE) FROM THE EARLY TERTIARY OF UTAH AND COLORADO |
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Authors: | Steven R Manchester |
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Institution: | Departments of Geology and Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, 47405 |
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Abstract: | Fossil twigs with attached foliage, fruits, and flowers from the middle Eocene of the Green River Formation in northeastern Utah and northwestern Colorado and from the early Oligocene Florissant beds of central Colorado provide a firm basis for reconstructing two species of an extinct ulmaceous genus that was widely distributed in the Tertiary of midlatitude western North America and Europe. The fruits are samaras of Cedrelospermum Saporta, a genus previously known only from isolated specimens. The distichously arranged, slender, pinnate-veined leaves vary from serrate with simple teeth to, less commonly, entire-margined. Corresponding isolated leaves in the Green River, Florissant, and other Eocene to Oligocene localities of western North America are now excluded from Zelkova and Myrica, to which they were previously misidentified. The anthers of the staminate flowers contain 3–5 porate pollen with rugulate sculpture. Based upon combined characters of phyllotaxy, and leaf, flower, fruit, and pollen morphology, Cedrelospermum can be referred to the extant subfamily Ulmoideae, and is similar to Phyllostylon, Zelkova, and Hemiptelea. The abundance of Cedrelospermum in lake sediments of volcanic areas, together with its production of numerous small winged fruits, suggest that it was an early successional colonizer of open habitats. |
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