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Fossil plants, Vol. 2 cover

Fossil plants, Vol. 2

Chapter 26: Poecilitostachys.
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About This Book

A comprehensive palaeobotanical textbook surveying fossil representatives of non-flowering plant groups, with detailed treatments of Sphenophyllales, Psilotales, Lycopodiales and arborescent lycopods. It compares living and fossil morphology and anatomy, illustrates stem and reproductive structures, and discusses taxonomic distinctions such as Lepidodendron and related genera. Chapters integrate microscopic sections, casts, and impressions, and consider palaeogeographic distribution and recent research developments. Numerous drawings and plates support descriptions and anatomical interpretations for students of botany and geology.

Fig. 139. Lycostrobus Scotti, Nath. (After Nathorst; ⅘ nat. size.)

The comparison made by Nathorst with Isoetes is based on a resemblance between the spores of the two genera and on the evidence, which is not decisive, of the existence of sterile strands of tissue in the sporangia of Lycostrobus. This similarity is however hardly of sufficient importance to justify the inclusion of the Rhaetic strobilus in the Isoetaceae. In size and in the arrangement and form of the sporophylls the cone presents a much closer resemblance to Lepidodendron than to Isoetes. It is probably advisable to regard this Rhaetic type simply as a lycopodiaceous genus which we are unable, without additional information, to assign to a particular position.

The opinion expressed by Professor Fliche[234] that the plant described by Schimper and Mougeot as Caulopteris tessellata, a supposed tree-fern stem, from Triassic rocks of Lorraine, is more probably a large lycopodiaceous stem, either a Lepidodendron or a new genus, is worthy of note in reference to Nathorst’s account of Lycostrobus.

In habit the fossil strobilus may be compared with the Triassic genus Pleuromeia, but the position of the sporangia on the sporophylls constitutes a well-marked difference. The most important result of Nathorst’s skillful treatment of this interesting fossil by chemical microscopic methods is the demonstration of the existence of a large heterosporous type of lycopodiaceous cone in a Rhaetic flora.

Poecilitostachys.

Under this generic name M. Fliche[235] has briefly described a fertile lycopodiaceous shoot from the Triassic rocks of Epinal in France: the type species Poecilitostachys Hangi consists of a cylindrical axis, 10 cm. × 5 mm., deprived of leaves and terminating in a rounded receptacle bearing a capitulum of bracts or fertile leaves. Detached megasporangia containing small globular bodies found in association with the capitulum are compared with the megasporangia of Isoetes.