Dryophyllum westerhausianum ( Richter, 1904 ) Halamski and Kvaček 2020

Halamski, Adam T., Kvaček, Jiří, Svobodová, Marcela, Durska, Ewa & Heřmanová, Zuzana, 2020, Late Cretaceous mega-, meso-, and microfloras from Lower Silesia, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 65 (4), pp. 811-878 : 825-826

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.00744.2020

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2A4087FF-211C-251F-FF73-F8FEFB19FA3E

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Dryophyllum westerhausianum ( Richter, 1904 ) Halamski and Kvaček
status

comb. nov.

Dryophyllum westerhausianum ( Richter, 1904) Halamski and Kvaček comb. nov.

Figs. 7–9 View Fig View Fig , 15C View Fig .

1904 Bignonia Westerhausiana View in CoL n. sp.; Richter 1904: 20, pl. 2: 1–6. non 1977 Dewalquea westerhausiana ; Rüffle and Knappe 1977: 279,

pl. 4: 1.

Basionym .— Bignonia westerhausiana Richter, 1904 ( Richter 1904: 20; pl. 2: 1–5; see Appendix 4).

Material.—Otok, Assemblage 6, lower–middle Santonian: MB.Pb.2008/0262, 2018/0039. Rakowice Małe, Assemblage 6, lower–middle Santonian: MB.Pb.2008/0256. Ulina, Assemblage 6, lower–middle Santonian: MGUWr 1699p.b, 1715p, 2707p, 2709p, 5593p, 5616p.a, 5617–5619p, 5637p, 5651p (mostly coll. Goeppert), MB.Pb.2008/0346, 0360, 0368, 2018/0029, 0045.

Description.—Leaf compound, trifoliolate (Fig. 8E). Leaflets notophyll to mesophyll (maximal recorded length ca. 10 cm, Fig. 9C View Fig ; estimated total length over 15 cm), petiolulate, blade attachment marginal; base shape decurrent; apex poorly preserved, straight (Fig. 8A, C). Blade shape oblong, seldom ovate, length-to-width ratio ca. (3.5–)4–5(–6). Margin unlobed, serrate. Teeth regularly spaced, ca. 1–2 per cm, sinus shape rounded, proximal flank flexuous, distal flank concave ( Fig. 9A, B View Fig ).

Primary venation pinnate, midvein strong. Major secondaries craspedodromous, spacing irregular, 1–4 per 2 cm, attachment excurrent, angle to midvein variable, 50–70(–80°). Intersecondaries none. Tertiaries percurrent, straight to sinuous ( Fig. 9B View Fig ). Quaternaries poorly preserved, reticulate?

Remarks.—The discussed species is included in Dryophyllum on account of several architectural features, among which marked asymmetry of lateral leaflets ( Halamski and Kvaček 2015: pl. 4: 1, 3, 4) and lack of intersecondaries allow the distinction with Debeya Miquel, 1853 . The type species of the latter, Debeya serrata Miquel, 1853 , from the Maastrichtian of Kunrade (Limburg, Netherlands), pos- sesses numerous intersecondaries ( Miquel 1853: pl. 1: 1) and lateral leaflets differing only weakly from the median one.

Rüffle and Knappe (1977) interpreted Bignonia westerhausiana Richter, 1904 , as a platanoid. However, such an interpretation is based on a specimen from another locality not given, but not Westerhausen; Rüffle and Knappe 1977: 279) and of manifestly different architecture (pentafoliolate and not trifoliolate; Rüffle and Knappe 1977: pl. 4: 1), so is likely to be erroneous.

Coniacian Dryophyllum geinitzianum ( Goeppert, 1844) Halamski and Kvaček, 2015 , is very similar to the discussed species in leaf architecture, venation pattern, and serration of the margin; the main difference is in the leaflets of the former being less elongate (length-to-width ratio 2.5–4; Halamski and Kvaček 2015). The similarity of D. westerhausianum to D. geinitzianum was stressed already by Richter (1904: 20).

Ternstroemites longifolius ( Friedrich, 1883) Rüffle and Krutzsch, 2005 , from the Maastrichtian of Eisleben has similar serration of the margin, but secondaries are much denser and brochidodromous. It is possible that Aralia veatchii Knowlton, 1917 , from the Frontier Formation of Wyoming should be interpreted as a trifoliolate leaf (see especially Knowlton 1917: pl. 39) analogous to Dryophyllum westerhausianum .

Dryandroides ” quercinea Velenovský, 1883 , described from the Coniacian of Česká Lípa is distinguished from Dryophyllum by narrower leaves with stronger teeth (Halamski and Kvaček 2016) and the presence of intersecondaries. For a discussion on the ecological segregation of the two species, see below (group Fagofolia, Dryandroides ).

Stratigraphic and geographic range.— Saxony, Westershausen (Santonian); Lower Silesia, Assemblage 4 (a single specimen; upper Coniacian?– lower Santonian ?) and Assemblage 6 (lower–middle Santonian) .

MB

Universidade de Lisboa, Museu Bocage

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Magnoliopsida

Order

Fagales

Family

Fagaceae

Genus

Dryophyllum

Loc

Dryophyllum westerhausianum ( Richter, 1904 ) Halamski and Kvaček

Halamski, Adam T., Kvaček, Jiří, Svobodová, Marcela, Durska, Ewa & Heřmanová, Zuzana 2020
2020
Loc

Bignonia

Ruffle, L. & Knappe, H. 1977: 279
Richter, P. 1904: 20
1904
Loc

Basionym

Richter, P. 1904: 20
1904
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