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Seed ferns survived the end-Cretaceous mass extinction in Tasmania.
Swedish Museum of Natural History, Department of Paleobiology.ORCID iD: 0000-0001-6723-239X
2008 (English)In: American Journal of Botany, ISSN 0002-9122, E-ISSN 1537-2197, Vol. 95, no 4, p. 465-71Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Seed ferns, dominant elements of the vegetation in many parts of the world from the Triassic to Cretaceous, were considered to have disappeared at the end of the Cretaceous together with several other groups that had occupied key positions in terrestrial and marine ecosystems such as dinosaurs, plesiosaurs, and ammonoids. Seed-fern demise is generally correlated with competition from diversifying flowering plants through the Cretaceous and the global environmental crisis related to the Chicxulub impact event in the paleotropics at the end of the period. New fossils from Tasmania show that one seed-fern lineage survived into the Cenozoic by at least 13 million years. These fossils are described here as a new species, Komlopteris cenozoicus. Komlopteris is a genus of seed ferns attributed to Corystospermaceae and until now was not known from sediments younger than the Early Cretaceous. Discovery of this "Lazarus taxon," together with the presence of a range of other relictual fossil and extant organisms in Tasmania, other southern Gondwanan provinces, and some regions of northern North America and Asia, underscores high-latitude regions as biodiversity refugia during global environmental crises and highlights their importance as sources of postextinction radiations.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
2008. Vol. 95, no 4, p. 465-71
Keywords [en]
Australia; Corystospermaceae; Eocene; extinction; Komlopteris ; refugia; seed ferns; Tasmania
National Category
Natural Sciences
Research subject
The changing Earth
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:nrm:diva-319DOI: 10.3732/ajb.95.4.465PubMedID: 21632371OAI: oai:DiVA.org:nrm-319DiVA, id: diva2:719381
Available from: 2014-05-23 Created: 2014-05-23 Last updated: 2017-12-05Bibliographically approved

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