Affiliation:
1. Department of Geosciences and Earth and Environmental Systems Institute Pennsylvania State University University Park PA 16802 USA
2. Instituto de Investigaciones en Biodiversidad y Medioambiente, Universidad Nacional del Comahue Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Tecnológicas San Carlos de Bariloche Río Negro R8400FRF Argentina
3. L. H. Bailey Hortorium, Plant Biology Section, School of Integrative Plant Science Cornell University Ithaca NY 14853 USA
4. Museo Paleontológico Egidio Feruglio Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas Trelew Chubut 9100 Argentina
Abstract
AbstractPremiseThe spurge family Euphorbiaceae is prominent in tropical rainforests worldwide, particularly in Asia. There is little consensus on the biogeographic origins of the family or its principal lineages. No confirmed spurge macrofossils have come from Gondwana.MethodsWe describe the first Gondwanan macrofossils of Euphorbiaceae, represented by two infructescences and associated peltate leaves from the early Eocene (52 Myr ago [Ma]) Laguna del Hunco site in Chubut, Argentina.ResultsThe infructescences are panicles bearing tiny, pedicellate, spineless capsular fruits with two locules, two axile lenticular seeds, and two unbranched, plumose stigmas. The fossils' character combination only occurs today in some species of the Macaranga‐Mallotus clade (MMC; Euphorbiaceae), a widespread Old‐World understory group often thought to have tropical Asian origins. The associated leaves are consistent with extant Macaranga.ConclusionsThe new fossils are the oldest known for the MMC, demonstrating its Gondwanan history and marking its divergence by at least 52 Ma. This discovery makes an Asian origin of the MMC unlikely because immense oceanic distances separated Asia and South America 52 Ma. The only other MMC reproductive fossils so far known are also from the southern hemisphere (early Miocene, southern New Zealand), far from the Asian tropics. The MMC, along with many other Gondwanan survivors, most likely entered Asia during the Neogene Sahul‐Sunda collision. Our discovery adds to a substantial series of well‐dated, well‐preserved fossils from one undersampled region, Patagonia, that have changed our understanding of plant biogeographic history.
Subject
Plant Science,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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