Volume 80, Issue 6 p. 616-623
Paleobotany

LATE CRETACEOUS FOSSIL FLOWERS OF ERICALEAN AFFINITY

Kevin C. Nixon

Kevin C. Nixon

L. H. Bailey Hortorium, 462 Mann Library Building, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, 14853

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William L. Crepet

William L. Crepet

L. H. Bailey Hortorium, 462 Mann Library Building, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, 14853

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First published: 01 June 1993
Citations: 62
Author for correspondence.

Abstract

Fossilized flowers of ericalean affinity are reported from the Turanian (ca. 90 MYBP, million years before present) of New Jersey. The fossils are remarkably well preserved and three-dimensional, and are the oldest known floral remains of Ericales. The series of fossil flower buds, floral fragments, and fruits are not identical to any modern genus of Ericales. The inverted U-shaped anthers with pseudoterminal awns, and the fluted syncarpous ovary of the fossils suggest affinities with basal Ericaceae, probably near extant Enkianthus, a taxon that also shares monadinous pollen with the fossil. Pollen grains were observed clumped on a stigma in one of the fossil flowers. Fossilized acid-resistant strands having characteristics, including similar diameter and sculpture pattern, in common with the muri connect pollen grains and, with scanning electron microscopy, appear continuous with the tectum, supporting the interpretation that they are viscin threads. These are the oldest reported fossilized viscin threads, and the only fossilized viscin threads found in situ in flowers. In modern Ericales and Onagraceae, the presence of viscin threads is associated with highly specific plant-pollinator relationships, raising the possibility that such specific pollinator-plant relationships had developed by the mid-Cretaceous. This is consistent with floral characters in these ericalean fossils, the presence of advanced meliponine bees in slightly younger sediments from the same region, and with the morphology and affinities of other fossil flowers from the same sediments.