New records of leaf galls and arthropod oviposition scars in Permian-Triassic Gondwanan gymnosperms

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Abstract

Single, midrib-positioned galls and midrib-flanking oviposition scars are described from four species of Permian glossopterid foliage from Australia and South Africa. Several of these traces have been mistaken previously for glossopterid reproductive organs or fructification detachment scars. A single Early Triassic corystosperm leaf from Australia is reported bearing multiple disc-like galls on both the midrib and pinnules. A Middle Triassic taeniopterid gymnosperm leaf from Australia is described hosting oviposition scars between consecutive secondary veins flanking the midrib. These fossils attest to a much richer record of plantarthropod interactions in the late Palaeozoic and early Mesozoic of high-latitude Gondwana than previously reported, and indicate that herbivory and reproductive strategies involving galling and foliar ovipositioning were re-established relatively soon after the end-Permian mass extinction event that saw major turnovers in both the flora and insect fauna. © 2011 CSIRO.

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APA

McLoughlin, S. (2011). New records of leaf galls and arthropod oviposition scars in Permian-Triassic Gondwanan gymnosperms. Australian Journal of Botany, 59(2), 156–169. https://doi.org/10.1071/BT10297

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