In this paper well-preserved isoetalean microsporophyll, containing in situ microspores, is described from the uppermost part of the Utrillas Formation (latest Albian) in Teruel Province, northeastern Spain. Similar but dispersed microspores were described previously as Peromonolites. Fossil plant impressions and compressions including the sporophyll lamina and microsporangium are referred to the fossil genus Isoetites. Although Isoetes-like megafossil remains, often with in situ or associated megaspores, are known from quite a few Cretaceous sites, and dispersed microspores are known, the presence of intact microsporangia is rare. Herein we suggest that microsporangia may have dispersed in masses, possibly representing a new unknown strategy in microspore dispersal in this group of plants. © 2014 U. Villanueva-Amadoz et al.
CITATION STYLE
Villanueva-Amadoz, U., Sender, L. M., Diez, J. B., Ferrer, J. J., & Pons, D. (2014). A new isoetalean microsporophyll from the latest albian of northeastern Spain: Diversity in the development and dispersal strategies of microspores. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica, 59(2), 479–490. https://doi.org/10.4202/app.2012.0010
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.