Nodosisporites makotoi Legrand, Pons, Nishida & Yamada, 2011
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.5252/g2011n1a6 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039A87FC-FFD2-617E-FF76-FE40FB32FD63 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe (2021-03-11 13:46:52, last updated 2021-03-11 13:46:55) |
scientific name |
Nodosisporites makotoi Legrand, Pons, Nishida & Yamada |
status |
n. sp. |
Nodosisporites makotoi Legrand, Pons, Nishida & Yamada n. sp. ( Fig. 10 A-F)
Nodosisporites sp., Legrand, Palynologie des dépôts Jurassique supérieur et Crétacé inférieur du Japon, et provinces paléofloristiques du sud-est asiatique: 166, 167, pl. XIII, figs 1, 2, 4, 7; pl. XIV, fig. 7 (2009).
TYPE MATERIAL. — Site II, horizon 2, slides a, b ; holotype ( II2 a-L58/2; Fig. 10A, D) ; paratypes ( II2 b-E56/3, II2b-U33; Fig. 10B, C, E, F) .
Collection de Paléobotanique-UPMC, Paris, France.
ETYMOLOGY. — The species is named in honour of Prof. Makoto Nishida, who first studied fossil plants from the Choshi Group.
OCCURRENCE. — Ashikajima and Kimigahama formations.
TYPE LOCALITY. — Hatoyama, SE Choshi Peninsula, Chiba Prefecture, Japan .
STRATIGRAPHIC HORIZON. — Ashikajima Formation (Barremian).
DIAGNOSIS
Tetrahedral trilete microspore. Amb rounded triangular. Proximal face slightly flattened, with a psilate contact area followed by 1 or 2 muri parallel to the equator. The laesurae are relatively narrow, raised (about 3 µm), undulating, and extend to the 3/4 of the spore radius or to the equator; they are smooth or ornamented by small spines (0.5-1 µm high and 1-3 µm in basal diameter). Near the apices, 5-6 big spines (3-5 µm high) are present. A translucent equatorial zona with a dentate margin can be seen. The exine is cicatricose. The distal face shows 3 sets of 3-4 muri sinuous but parallel to the equator. One of these sets goes on to form a triangle (sometimes, more or less a network) centered on the distal pole ( Fig. 11). The ornamentation of this form corresponds to the type I-A defined by Krutzsch (1963). Equatorial diameter = 40-45 µm.
REMARKS
Appendicisporites dentimarginatus Brenner, 1963 shows similarities with Nodosisporites makotoi , but lacks spines on the apices.
BOTANICAL AFFINITIES
Schizaeales , Anemiaceae ( Dettmann & Clifford 1992) . The ornamentation shows similarities with that of Anemia phyllitidis (Linnaeus) Swartz from Brazil, figured by Tryon & Lugardon (1991).
BRENNER G. J. 1963. - The spores and pollen of the Potomac Group of Maryland. Bulletin of the Department of Geology, Mines and Water Ressources, Maryland 27, 215 p.
DETTMANN M. E. & CLIFFORD H. T. 1992. - Phylogeny and biogeography of Ruffordia, Mohria and Anemia (Schizaeaceae) and Ceratopteris (Pteridaceae): evidence from in situ and dispersed spores. Alcheringa 16: 269 - 314.
KRUTZSCH W. 1963. - Atlas der mittel- und jungtertiaren dispersen Sporen und Pollen-sowie der Mikroplanktonformen des nordlichen Mitteleuropas. Lieferung III. Sphagnaceoide und Selaginellaceoide Sporenformen. Veb Gustav Fischer Verlag Jena, Berlin, 128 p.
TRYON A. F. & LUGARDON B. 1991. - Spores of the Pteridophyta: Surface, Wall Structure, and Diversity Based on Electron Microscope Studies. Springer-Verlag, New York, 648 p.
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |
1 (by felipe, 2021-03-11 13:46:52)
2 (by ExternalLinkService, 2021-03-11 14:20:26)
3 (by valdenar, 2021-03-16 16:37:16)
4 (by valdenar, 2021-03-16 17:42:00)
5 (by julia, 2024-10-16 19:49:18)
6 (by julia, 2024-10-16 20:29:15)
7 (by ExternalLinkService, 2024-10-16 20:38:24)