1. Late Cretaceous Aquatic Vegetation: Tolmania aquatica gen. et sp. nov., from Southern Alberta, Canada.
- Author
-
Edmonds, Nathaniel L., Stockey, Ruth A., and Rothwell, Gar W.
- Subjects
- *
PLANT size , *UNIFORM spaces , *PLANT growth , *PLANTAGINACEAE , *FOSSILS - Abstract
Premise of research. Sixteen compression/impression specimens of a new floating aquatic angiosperm that enrich our knowledge of Late Cretaceous vegetation have been identified from the early Maastrichtian St. Mary River Formation near Cardston, Alberta, Canada. Methodology. Fossils were studied using dégagement and photographed under reflected light. Leaves were morphotyped using methodology in the Manual of Leaf Architecture and compared to other extant and extinct rosette-forming floating aquatic angiosperms. Pivotal results. Stems of this aquatic dicot show determinate growth of floating shoots with opposite/decussate attachment of heterophyllous leaves. Leaves are simple and sessile at the apicalmost node, simple and petiolate at the second node, and compound with three leaflets at nodes 3–6. Compound leaves are petiolate and ternate (trifoliate). Leaflet shape is unlobed, obovate, and symmetrical; base is acute-obtuse; apex angle is obtuse; base shape is convex; petiolar attachment is marginal; apex shape is rounded; and margin is crenate. Primary veins are flabellate to pinnate with three to five basal veins that dichotomize distally. Secondary veins are craspedodromous with uniform spacing and angles. Teeth are of a single order, three per centimeter near apex, and convex-convex; the sinus is angular, and the apex is foraminate. Conclusions. While the basic growth habit of this plant is similar to that of several extant taxa in the Onagraceae, Lythraceae, Plantaginaceae, and Hydrocharitaceae, leaf venation and the presence of compound leaves differ greatly from the living species. In growth habit and the presence of both simple and compound leaves, the new plant is similar to Quereuxia angulata , also found at this fossil site. These fossils are described as a new genus and species, Tolmania aquatica Edmonds, Stockey & Rothwell, which differs from Quereuxia in pattern of heterophylly, venation, larger plant size, stem morphology, and the presence of hydathodes in the leaves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF