Reproductive morphology of araucarian samara is revised revealing a carpellate structure of the stone. In A. columnaris it is formed by a supercoiled spermophyll (‘seed scale’), with a stigmatic apical lobe. This structure is analogous to the ‘classical’ peltate carpel of flowering plants. Stone opens with two apical pores. Pollen germinates on the apical stigmatic crest, with extracellular matter exuded from a stigmatic gland and its opposite on the bract apophysis. Ovulate structures are of the same basic type in the allied genera Wollemia and Pararaucaria. Neither of these genera is morphologically ‘transitional’ at the generic as well as familial levels thus setting araucarians apart from the rest of conifers no longer conceivable as a uniquely derived clade of gymnospermous plants. Araucarians thus deserve the status of a separate order anticipating the major evolutionary advancements of angiospermy in flowering plants.
Published in | Journal of Plant Sciences (Volume 2, Issue 5) |
DOI | 10.11648/j.jps.20140205.13 |
Page(s) | 159-166 |
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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited. |
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Copyright © The Author(s), 2014. Published by Science Publishing Group |
Plant Morphology, Paleobotany, Conifers, Araucariaceae, Carpel, Angiosperm Origin, Fossil Gymnosperms, Evolutionary Parallelism
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APA Style
Valentin Krassilov, Sophia Barinova. (2014). Carpel – Fruit in a Coniferous Genus Araucaria and the Enigma of Angiosperm Origin. Journal of Plant Sciences, 2(5), 159-166. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.jps.20140205.13
ACS Style
Valentin Krassilov; Sophia Barinova. Carpel – Fruit in a Coniferous Genus Araucaria and the Enigma of Angiosperm Origin. J. Plant Sci. 2014, 2(5), 159-166. doi: 10.11648/j.jps.20140205.13
AMA Style
Valentin Krassilov, Sophia Barinova. Carpel – Fruit in a Coniferous Genus Araucaria and the Enigma of Angiosperm Origin. J Plant Sci. 2014;2(5):159-166. doi: 10.11648/j.jps.20140205.13
@article{10.11648/j.jps.20140205.13, author = {Valentin Krassilov and Sophia Barinova}, title = {Carpel – Fruit in a Coniferous Genus Araucaria and the Enigma of Angiosperm Origin}, journal = {Journal of Plant Sciences}, volume = {2}, number = {5}, pages = {159-166}, doi = {10.11648/j.jps.20140205.13}, url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.jps.20140205.13}, eprint = {https://article.sciencepublishinggroup.com/pdf/10.11648.j.jps.20140205.13}, abstract = {Reproductive morphology of araucarian samara is revised revealing a carpellate structure of the stone. In A. columnaris it is formed by a supercoiled spermophyll (‘seed scale’), with a stigmatic apical lobe. This structure is analogous to the ‘classical’ peltate carpel of flowering plants. Stone opens with two apical pores. Pollen germinates on the apical stigmatic crest, with extracellular matter exuded from a stigmatic gland and its opposite on the bract apophysis. Ovulate structures are of the same basic type in the allied genera Wollemia and Pararaucaria. Neither of these genera is morphologically ‘transitional’ at the generic as well as familial levels thus setting araucarians apart from the rest of conifers no longer conceivable as a uniquely derived clade of gymnospermous plants. Araucarians thus deserve the status of a separate order anticipating the major evolutionary advancements of angiospermy in flowering plants.}, year = {2014} }
TY - JOUR T1 - Carpel – Fruit in a Coniferous Genus Araucaria and the Enigma of Angiosperm Origin AU - Valentin Krassilov AU - Sophia Barinova Y1 - 2014/09/30 PY - 2014 N1 - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.jps.20140205.13 DO - 10.11648/j.jps.20140205.13 T2 - Journal of Plant Sciences JF - Journal of Plant Sciences JO - Journal of Plant Sciences SP - 159 EP - 166 PB - Science Publishing Group SN - 2331-0731 UR - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.jps.20140205.13 AB - Reproductive morphology of araucarian samara is revised revealing a carpellate structure of the stone. In A. columnaris it is formed by a supercoiled spermophyll (‘seed scale’), with a stigmatic apical lobe. This structure is analogous to the ‘classical’ peltate carpel of flowering plants. Stone opens with two apical pores. Pollen germinates on the apical stigmatic crest, with extracellular matter exuded from a stigmatic gland and its opposite on the bract apophysis. Ovulate structures are of the same basic type in the allied genera Wollemia and Pararaucaria. Neither of these genera is morphologically ‘transitional’ at the generic as well as familial levels thus setting araucarians apart from the rest of conifers no longer conceivable as a uniquely derived clade of gymnospermous plants. Araucarians thus deserve the status of a separate order anticipating the major evolutionary advancements of angiospermy in flowering plants. VL - 2 IS - 5 ER -