Dordrechtites Arcanus Sp. Nov., An Anatomically Preserved Gymnospermous Reproductive Structure From the Middle Triassic of Antarctica

This is the publisher's version of an article which is being shared with permission. The original version may be accessed at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/668792 The genus Dordrechtites is an isolated ovulate structure previously described only from South Africa and Australia as impressions. The d...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:International Journal of Plant Sciences
Main Authors: Bergene, Julie Anne, Taylor, Edith L., Taylor, Thomas N.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: University of Chicago Press 2014
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1808/13678
https://doi.org/10.1086/668792
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Summary:This is the publisher's version of an article which is being shared with permission. The original version may be accessed at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/668792 The genus Dordrechtites is an isolated ovulate structure previously described only from South Africa and Australia as impressions. The discovery of compressed and permineralized specimens of this taxon at the base of Mount Falla (uppermost Fremouw Formation) in the central Transantarctic Mountains extends the geographical and geological distribution of the genus and increases the known floral diversity of the Triassic of Antarctica. The first permineralized species, Dordrechtites arcanus, is described using standard acetate peel techniques and includes internal anatomy of an elongate arm that extends over the top of a central cupule containing two elongate, bilaterally symmetrical, orthotropous ovules. An arc-shaped collateral vascular bundle extends from the arm into the top of the cupule, branches, and then extends around the ovule to about halfway down to the micropylar end. The cupule is parenchymatous and includes transfusion tissue with cells that have pitted walls. The sclerotesta of the ovule is up to 200 mm thick, consisting of an outer layer with longitudinally oriented, thick-walled cells and an inner layer one cell thick of rectangular, thick-walled cells. The micropyle is flared at the attenuated tip of the pyramidal cupule. The four previously described species of Dordrechtites have uncertain affinities, and although the morphology and anatomy of this taxon is now known, the affinities within the gymnosperms are still uncertain.