The Carboniferous microfungus Protoascon missouriensis has been interpreted variously as an ascomycete, chytridiomycete, zygomycete and oomycete. We offer a more complete interpretation based on a re-examination of the type material that suggests the fossil represents an (a)zygosporangium-suspensor complex of a zygomycete comparable to some modern members of the Mucorales.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe permineralized, corystosperm, cupulate, ovule-bearing organ Umkomasia resinosa is described from the early Middle Triassic of Antarctica. This is the first description of anatomically preserved Umkomasia, which consists of a determinate cupulate branch with helically arranged, recurved, pedicellate megasporophylls, each of which bears one or two abaxially attached unitegmic ovules. Cupules are ovoid, bilobed with elongate ventral and dorsal openings or unlobed with a single ventral opening, and have a two-zoned parenchymatous cortex and abundant secretory cavities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRev Palaeobot Palynol
June 2001
Anatomically preserved ovules are described from silicified peat of Late Permian age collected from Skaar Ridge in the central Transantarctic Mountains, Antarctica. The small ovules are significant in possessing fleshy apical appendages and a funnel-shaped micropylar extension formed by the sarcotestal layer of the integument, by which they differ from all other Permian ovules described to date. The apical modifications may have functioned in pollination and/or seed dispersal.
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