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Revealing the diversity of amber source plants from the Early Cretaceous Crato Formation, Brazil.

Leyla Jean SeyfullahEmily A RobertsAlexander R SchmidtEugenio RagazziKen B AndersonDaniel Rodrigues do NascimentoWellington Ferreira da Silva FilhoLutz Kunzmann
Published in: BMC evolutionary biology (2020)
The combined results of the cones' novel gross morphology and the analyses of the in situ amber and pollen clearly indicate that the new taxon of resinous gymnosperm pollen cones from the Crato Formation is affiliated with Erdtmanithecales. The cone morphology is very distinct from all known pollen cone types of this extinct plant group. We therefore assume that the plant group that produced Eucommiidites-type pollen is much more diverse in habits than previously thought. Moreover, the diversity of potential amber source plants from the Crato Formation is now expanded beyond the Araucariaceae and the Cheirolepidiaceae to include this member of the Erdtmanithecales. Despite dispersed Eucommiidites pollen being noted from the Crato Formation, this is the first time macrofossils of Erdtmanithecales have been recognized from the Early Cretaceous of South America.
Keyphrases
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