A hidden cradle of plant evolution in Permian tropical lowlands

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Abstract

The latitudinal biodiversity gradient today has deep roots in the evolutionary history of Earth’s biota over geologic time. In the marine realm, earliest fossil occurrences at low latitudes reveal a tropical cradle for many animal groups. However, the terrestrial fossil record—especially from drier environments that are thought to drive evolutionary innovation—is sparse. We present mixed plant-fossil assemblages from Permian equatorial lowlands in present-day Jordan that harbor precocious records of three major seed-plant lineages that all became dominant during the Mesozoic, including the oldest representative of any living conifer family. These finds offer a glimpse of the early evolutionary origins of modern plant groups in disturbance-prone tropical habitats that are usually hidden from observation.

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Blomenkemper, P., Kerp, H., Hamad, A. A., DiMichele, W. A., & Bomfleur, B. (2018). A hidden cradle of plant evolution in Permian tropical lowlands. Science, 362(6421), 1414–1416. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aau4061

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