Artículos de revistas
Early Cretaceous palm pollen tetrads from Patagonia, Argentina
Fecha
2016-04Registro en:
Martinez, Leandro Carlos Alcides; Archangelsky, Sergio; Pramparo, Mercedes Beatriz; Archangelsky, Sergio; Early Cretaceous palm pollen tetrads from Patagonia, Argentina; Academic Press Ltd - Elsevier Science Ltd; Cretaceous Research; 59; 4-2016; 129-139
0195-6671
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Martinez, Leandro Carlos Alcides
Archangelsky, Sergio
Pramparo, Mercedes Beatriz
Archangelsky, Sergio
Resumen
Pollen tetrads and monads of spiny pollen grains with close affinities to palms have been found in several localities from the Lower Cretaceous (Barremian-Albian) of the Austral Basin (Magallanes), Patagonia (Argentina). When found dispersed, spiny and zonasulcate pollen grains, are commonly referred to the fossil genus Spinizonocolpites Muller, with close affinities to the extant palm Nypa. The Patagonian specimens were compared with fossil and extant members of the Arecaceae, showing close similarities in shape and sculpture with the primitive members of the subfamily Calamoideae. Nypa produces tetragonal tetrads different from the tetrahedral tetrads of the Spinizonocolpites-type recovered from Patagonia. The specimens were studied with LM and SEM. The polarity, aperture orientation and tetrad type allow segregating the Patagonian grains from the Nypoideae and relating it to the Calamoideae subfamily. These records suggest an antique origin of monocots and a probably initial diversification of calamoid palms during the Early Cretaceous in high latitudes of Gondwana. The presence of palmae during the Early Cretaceous in southern South America suggests a warm and humid climate, similar to that found in present days at tropics.