Craigia W.W.SMITH et W.E.EVANS, 1921
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.37520/fi.2022.008 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/2C0A0F4A-2E09-175D-99E5-FE58FA626F7D |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Craigia W.W.SMITH et W.E.EVANS, 1921 |
status |
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cf. Craigia W.W.SMITH et W.E.EVANS, 1921 View in CoL
Pl. 2, Figs 10–12
M a t e r i a l. Rare pollen grains have been found in Govone and Ciabòt Cagna sections. No plant macroremains have been reported from the post-evaporitic sediments of the PB.
R e m a r k s. The palynological record of Craigia turns out to be problematic as the pollen grains are difficult to identify, due to a consistent similarity to Tilia as evidenced by the morphological description of Craigia pollen by Kvaček et al. (2002) and Zetter et al. (2002).
Under the optical microscope, the pollen is a monad, oblate, brevicolporate, the exine is reticulate with apertures characterised by a thickening of the circular horseshoeshaped nexin ( Kvaček et al. 2002).
In contrast, Tilia is thicker and much wider and less convex ( Perveen et al. 2004). Furthermore, Tilia pollen is larger and with more prominent sculpture ( Grímsson et al. 2020). Despite the difficulty to recognize Craigia pollen under the optical microscope, rare pollen grains associated to this genus (cf. Craigia ) are reported here for the first time in the post-evaporitic phase of the PB.
Fruits of Craigia are known from the evaporitic interval ( Martinetto et al. 2000, Bertini and Martinetto 2008) and leaves usually associated with this same fruit type (“ Dombeyopsis lobata UNGER ”; Kvaček et al. 2005) have been reported from the Pliocene of the PB ( Martinetto 2003).
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