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Dr. Jeffrey M. Osborn
Dean of the School of Science and Professor of Biology
The College of New Jersey |
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Publication Abstract
Osborn, J. M. 1994. The morphology and ultrastructure of
Caytonanthus. Canadian Journal of Botany 72: 1519-1527.
Abstract
The morphology and ultrastructure of Caytonanthus arberi pollen organs and pollen, collected from the Middle
Jurassic, Cayton Bay locality of England, are described. Pollen organs consist of flattened rachises with
suboppositely branched pinnae, which bear terminal synangia. The synangium is covered with a two-zoned
(fibrillar/amorphous) cuticle. The locule of each pollen sac is lined with a lamellated tapetal membrane and
contains numerous pollen grains and orbicules. Grains are small, monosulcate, and bisaccate. Exine ornamentation
of the proximal wall is psilate, while, distally the apertural membrane is scabrate. The exine is composed of an
thick, light-staining sexine and a thin, dark-staining nexine. The sexine is tectate-alveolate laterally, becoming
nearly homogeneous medially. The infratectal alveolae are robust and are continuous with the endoreticular units
of the sacci. Sacci are eusaccate, with endoreticulations attached only to the outer walls. Several immature
grains have also been identified, and indicate that the nexine is lamellate throughout and that infratectal
alveolae and nexine lamellae are well developed prior to complete tectum synthesis. Saccus size and ultrastructure
of Caytonanthus pollen are compared with those of other Late Paleozoic and Mesozoic seed ferns that produced
saccate pollen (Callistophytales, Glossopteridales, Corystospermales) and found to be smaller and more extensively
filled with thicker endoreticulations. Documentation of the eusaccate character state in
Caytonanthus is also
discussed regarding its phylogenetic implications.
Keywords:Caytonanthus, Caytoniales, Mesozoic, pollen, seed fern, ultrastructure
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