Fungi associated with Glossopteris (Glossopteridales) leaves from the Permian of Antarctica: A preliminary report

PUBLISHED Fungi today occur on virtually every plant part, living and dead, and represent a significant proportion of fungal diversity. Arborescent seed ferns characterized by large, tongue-shaped leaves with reticulate venation (Glossopteris) represent the dominant floral element in the Permian of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Harper, Carla
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2262/96281
http://people.tcd.ie/charper
https://epub.ub.uni-muenchen.de/26937/1/zitteliana_2015_55_06.pdf
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Summary:PUBLISHED Fungi today occur on virtually every plant part, living and dead, and represent a significant proportion of fungal diversity. Arborescent seed ferns characterized by large, tongue-shaped leaves with reticulate venation (Glossopteris) represent the dominant floral element in the Permian of Gondwana. However, documented evidence of fungi associated with the leaves of these plants is exceedingly rare. Partially degraded Glossopteris leaves from two upper Permian permineralized peat deposits from Antarctica yield scattered evidence of fungal colonization in the form of hyphae, spores, sporangia, and mycelia. Intact leaves from the same deposits are typically free of fungi, suggesting that the fungi in the degraded leaves were saprotrophs on the forest floor, rather than colonizers of living leaves. We hypoth-esize that the scarcity of fungi associated with Antarctic Glossopteris leaves may be related to structural and physiological adaptions of theplants to the extreme conditions that governed late Paleozoic polar ecosystems.