Catanthus dolichostemon E.M.Friis, P.R.Crane et K.R.Pedersen
Plant Fossil Names Registry Number: PFN000594
Act LSID: urn:lsid:plantfossilnames.org:act:594
Authors: E. M. Friis, P. R. Crane & K. R. Pedersen
Rank: species
Genus: Catanthus E.M.Friis, P.R.Crane et K.R.Pedersen
Reference: Friis, E. M., Crane, P. R. & Pedersen, K. R. (2020): Catanthus, an extinct magnoliid flower from the Early Cretaceous of Portugal. – International Journal of Plant Sciences 182(online): 28–45.
Page of description: 30
Illustrations or figures: figs 1–7
Name is type for
Types
Holotype S101218, Palaeobotanical Collections, Department of Palaeobiology, the Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm, Sweden
Figures: figs 1A–1C, 4
Note: Holotype from Catefica sample 49.
Paratypes: S101217, S172554–S172557 (Catefica sample 49), S118688, S170383, S174740, S174899 (Catefica sample 50), S174255 (Catefica sample 150), S174308 (Catefica sample 154), S172550 (Catefica sample 361), housed in Palaeobotanical Collections, Department of Palaeobiology, the Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm, Sweden.
Original diagnosis/description
Flower pedicellate, structurally bisexual, whorled. Floral receptacle shallow. Perianth of nine tepals in three whorls of three. Three outer tepals thick, sepal-like, imbricate, and covering the inner perianth parts. Six tepals of the two inner whorls free, petallike, with a thin blade; outer petaloid tepals with a narrow base; inner petaloid tepals with a broad base. Androecium probably of 18 stamens in several whorls. Stamens with long, broad, and fleshy bases and short triangular anthers. Anthers dithecate and tetrasporangiate, with a broad connective that tapers into an apical extension; dehiscence extrorse. Anther wall with an inner lining of small spherical orbicules. Pollen circular in polar view, monoaperturate, trichotomocolpate, and monocolpate, with a distinct aperture margin and granular aperture membrane. Tectum perforate, coarsely rugulate; infratectal layer probably columellate. Gynoecium superior, apocarpous, of six carpels (rarely five), each with a restricted stigma.
Etymology
From dolichos and stemon (Greek for long and stamen).
Stratigraphy
Cretaceous, Lower Cretaceous
Almargem Formation, Early Cretaceous (Aptian–early Albian)
Locality
Portugal
Catefica (lat. 39°03′30″N, lat. 09°14′30″W), between the villages of Catefica and Mugideira, about 4 km south of Torres Vedras.
Plant fossil remain
macro- and meso-fossils-embryophytes except wood
Comments
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