Artículo
Esqueletizaciones en hojas provenientes de la formación palo pintado (mioceno tardío), provincia de Salta, Argentina : icnotaxonomía y una revisión de sus registros fósiles
Skeletonizations on leaves from the palo pintado formation (late miocene) of Salta province, Argentina : ichnotaxonomy and a review of their fossil records
Fecha
2017Registro en:
Robledo, Juan Manuel, 2017. Esqueletizaciones en hojas provenientes de la formación palo pintado (mioceno tardío), provincia de Salta, Argentina : icnotaxonomía y una revisión de sus registros fósiles. Boletín de la Real Sociedad Española de Historia Natural. Sección Geológica. Madrid: Real Sociedad Española de Historia Natural, no. 111, p. 53-65. ISSN 0583-7510.
0583-7510
Autor
Robledo, Juan Manuel
Institución
Resumen
La icnotaxonomía de las esqueletizaciones hasta el momento está pobremente desarrollada. Esto quizá sea el
resultado de un escaso registro en comparación a otros tipos de trazas halladas en hojas fósiles. Aquí se dan a conocer
nuevas evidencias de esqueletizaciones identificadas en hojas procedentes de la Formación Palo Pintado (Mioceno
Tardío-Plioceno), que aflora en el centro-sur de la Provincia de Salta, Argentina. Del mismo modo, se propone una
nueva nomenclatura para separar las esqueletizaciones de las escisiones marginales, y así contribuir al ordenamiento
de la icnotaxonomía de las trazas en hojas fósiles. Se da a conocer el primer hallazgo de esqueletizaciones en helechos
neógenos, y que constituye el segundo caso en todo el registro fósil. Por último, este trabajo provee información sobre
el comportamiento y preferencias alimenticias de los insectos fitófagos durante este periodo de tiempo. The ichnotaxonomy of skeletonizations is poorly developed. These are the unique type of fossil traces, in the
category of external foliage feeding, that do not count with a clearly established classification. This may be the result
of a poor record compared to other types of traces found in fossil leaves. In this work, 856 impressions of angiosperms
and ferns were examined, 288 of them showed some evidence of phytophagy damages, among the latter 20 corresponded
to skeletonizations. The leaves carrying the traces come from the Quebrada del Horno, Quebrada de Alfredo and
Peñas Blancas outcrops. These are located in the center-south of the Province of Salta, Argentina. The Palo Pintado
Fm crops out in these localities, both the stratigraphic correlation and the radiometric dating confer to Palo Pintado
Fm a late Miocene - lower Pliocene age. It contacts in the lower section with Angastaco Fm and its upper part with
San Felipe Fm. Lithologically it is composed of sandstones alternating with siltstones and to a lesser degree wtih
conglomerates. Sandstones present a brownish coloration while siltstones exhibit yellow and brown hues that merge
to greenish sediments. Throughout the formation there is a disposition in successive finer-grained sedimentary cycles.
The layers of limolite are abundant at the base of the formation and become more sporadic towards the upper section.
As result of this study, new evidences of skeletonizations identified in leaves from the Palo Pintado Fm are revealed.
On the other hand, a new nomenclature is proposed to separate the skeletonizations from the marginal excisions, and
thus contribute to the ordering of the ichnotaxonomy of phytophagy traces in fossil leaves. The reason for this proposal
is due to that only two ichnospecies of skeletonizations are currently known and they are included in the ichnogenus
Phagophytichnus van Amerom, 1966, which was originally established to group the marginal excisions. These types
of traces (marginal excisions and skeletonizations) have different morphological and ecological characteristics; the
skeletonizations present intact leaf veins inside the traces; instead, the marginal excisions frequently remove all the
tissues, including the veins. On the other hand, skeletonizations are exclusively the result of a feeding process and the
marginal excisions are also indirect evidence of other types of behavior, for instance, the tissue removed from the leaves
can be used by some insects to build nests or as a substrate for the proliferation of fungi. By the above explained,
herein is established the ichnogenus Osteophytichnus nov. ichnogen. to include all skeletonizations. In addition, this
study reports for the first time skeletonizations on ferns of Neogene age, which also constitute the second case in the
entire fossil record. It was not possible to compare the fossil traces found in Acrostichum paleoaureum Beauchamp,
Lemoigne & Petrescu, 1973 with extant skeletonizations, since the scarse record of ferns attacked by skeletonizer
insects. In the same way, in the extant species related to A. paleoaureum, only non-marginal excisions and window
excisions have been reported, which did not allow to establish comparisons or infer possible producer insects for the traces reported in this work. Finally, herein is provided information about the behavior and food preferences of insects
during the Neogene of South America.