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Fossil leaves of Berhamniphyllum (Rhamnaceae) from Markam, Tibet and their biogeographic implications

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Fossil leaves of Berhamniphyllum (Rhamnaceae) from Markam, Tibet and their biogeographic implications. / Zhou, Z.; Wang, T.; Huang, J. et al.
In: Science China Earth Sciences, Vol. 63, No. 2, 01.02.2020, p. 224-234.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Zhou, Z, Wang, T, Huang, J, Liu, J, Deng, W, Li, S, Deng, C & Su, T 2020, 'Fossil leaves of Berhamniphyllum (Rhamnaceae) from Markam, Tibet and their biogeographic implications', Science China Earth Sciences, vol. 63, no. 2, pp. 224-234. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11430-019-9477-8

APA

Zhou, Z., Wang, T., Huang, J., Liu, J., Deng, W., Li, S., Deng, C., & Su, T. (2020). Fossil leaves of Berhamniphyllum (Rhamnaceae) from Markam, Tibet and their biogeographic implications. Science China Earth Sciences, 63(2), 224-234. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11430-019-9477-8

Vancouver

Zhou Z, Wang T, Huang J, Liu J, Deng W, Li S et al. Fossil leaves of Berhamniphyllum (Rhamnaceae) from Markam, Tibet and their biogeographic implications. Science China Earth Sciences. 2020 Feb 1;63(2):224-234. Epub 2019 Nov 22. doi: 10.1007/s11430-019-9477-8

Author

Zhou, Z. ; Wang, T. ; Huang, J. et al. / Fossil leaves of Berhamniphyllum (Rhamnaceae) from Markam, Tibet and their biogeographic implications. In: Science China Earth Sciences. 2020 ; Vol. 63, No. 2. pp. 224-234.

Bibtex

@article{9f93076d0c7840d59c985122cf21ff46,
title = "Fossil leaves of Berhamniphyllum (Rhamnaceae) from Markam, Tibet and their biogeographic implications",
abstract = "A new occurrence of buckthorn fossil leaves is reported from the upper Eocene strata of Markam Basin, southeastern Tibet, China. The leaf margin is either entire or slightly sinuous. Secondary veins are regularly spaced, forming eucamptodromous venation. These secondaries exist as straight lines from midvein to near margin and then arch abruptly upward and enter into a margin vein. The tertiary veins are densely spaced and parallel, and are percurrent to secondary veins. This leaf architecture conforms with Berhamniphyllum Jones and Dilcher, an extinct fossil genus reported from America. Our fossils are characterized by their dense secondaries, with secondary veins on the upper half portion of the blade accounting for over 40% of all secondaries. A new species, Berhamniphyllum junrongiae Z. K. Zhou, T. X. Wang et J. Huang sp. nov., is proposed. Further analysis shows that confident assignment among Rhamnidium, Berchemia, and Karwinskia cannot be made based on leaf characters alone. Berhamniphyllum might represent an extinct common ancestor of these genera. In this study, several fossil Berchemia from Yunnan and Shandong are emended and reassigned to Berhamniphyllum. A new complex, namely the Berchemia Complex, is proposed based on morphology, molecular evidence, and the fossil record. This complex contains the fossil leaves of Rhamnidium, Karwinskia, Berchemia, and Berhamniphyllum. The historical biogeography of the Berchemia Complex is also discussed in this paper. This complex might have originated in the late Cretaceous in Colombia, South America, and dispersed to North America via Central America during the Eocene. Subsequently, the complex moved from North America to East Asia via the Bering Land Bridge no later than the late Eocene. Besides, the complex migrated from North America to Europe via the North Atlantic Land Bridge and then migrated further to Africa. In East Asia, it first appeared in Markam on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, and then dispersed to other regions of Asia.",
author = "Z. Zhou and T. Wang and J. Huang and J. Liu and W. Deng and S. Li and C. Deng and T. Su",
year = "2020",
month = feb,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1007/s11430-019-9477-8",
language = "English",
volume = "63",
pages = "224--234",
journal = "Science China Earth Sciences",
issn = "1674-7313",
publisher = "Science in China Press",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Fossil leaves of Berhamniphyllum (Rhamnaceae) from Markam, Tibet and their biogeographic implications

AU - Zhou, Z.

AU - Wang, T.

AU - Huang, J.

AU - Liu, J.

AU - Deng, W.

AU - Li, S.

AU - Deng, C.

AU - Su, T.

PY - 2020/2/1

Y1 - 2020/2/1

N2 - A new occurrence of buckthorn fossil leaves is reported from the upper Eocene strata of Markam Basin, southeastern Tibet, China. The leaf margin is either entire or slightly sinuous. Secondary veins are regularly spaced, forming eucamptodromous venation. These secondaries exist as straight lines from midvein to near margin and then arch abruptly upward and enter into a margin vein. The tertiary veins are densely spaced and parallel, and are percurrent to secondary veins. This leaf architecture conforms with Berhamniphyllum Jones and Dilcher, an extinct fossil genus reported from America. Our fossils are characterized by their dense secondaries, with secondary veins on the upper half portion of the blade accounting for over 40% of all secondaries. A new species, Berhamniphyllum junrongiae Z. K. Zhou, T. X. Wang et J. Huang sp. nov., is proposed. Further analysis shows that confident assignment among Rhamnidium, Berchemia, and Karwinskia cannot be made based on leaf characters alone. Berhamniphyllum might represent an extinct common ancestor of these genera. In this study, several fossil Berchemia from Yunnan and Shandong are emended and reassigned to Berhamniphyllum. A new complex, namely the Berchemia Complex, is proposed based on morphology, molecular evidence, and the fossil record. This complex contains the fossil leaves of Rhamnidium, Karwinskia, Berchemia, and Berhamniphyllum. The historical biogeography of the Berchemia Complex is also discussed in this paper. This complex might have originated in the late Cretaceous in Colombia, South America, and dispersed to North America via Central America during the Eocene. Subsequently, the complex moved from North America to East Asia via the Bering Land Bridge no later than the late Eocene. Besides, the complex migrated from North America to Europe via the North Atlantic Land Bridge and then migrated further to Africa. In East Asia, it first appeared in Markam on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, and then dispersed to other regions of Asia.

AB - A new occurrence of buckthorn fossil leaves is reported from the upper Eocene strata of Markam Basin, southeastern Tibet, China. The leaf margin is either entire or slightly sinuous. Secondary veins are regularly spaced, forming eucamptodromous venation. These secondaries exist as straight lines from midvein to near margin and then arch abruptly upward and enter into a margin vein. The tertiary veins are densely spaced and parallel, and are percurrent to secondary veins. This leaf architecture conforms with Berhamniphyllum Jones and Dilcher, an extinct fossil genus reported from America. Our fossils are characterized by their dense secondaries, with secondary veins on the upper half portion of the blade accounting for over 40% of all secondaries. A new species, Berhamniphyllum junrongiae Z. K. Zhou, T. X. Wang et J. Huang sp. nov., is proposed. Further analysis shows that confident assignment among Rhamnidium, Berchemia, and Karwinskia cannot be made based on leaf characters alone. Berhamniphyllum might represent an extinct common ancestor of these genera. In this study, several fossil Berchemia from Yunnan and Shandong are emended and reassigned to Berhamniphyllum. A new complex, namely the Berchemia Complex, is proposed based on morphology, molecular evidence, and the fossil record. This complex contains the fossil leaves of Rhamnidium, Karwinskia, Berchemia, and Berhamniphyllum. The historical biogeography of the Berchemia Complex is also discussed in this paper. This complex might have originated in the late Cretaceous in Colombia, South America, and dispersed to North America via Central America during the Eocene. Subsequently, the complex moved from North America to East Asia via the Bering Land Bridge no later than the late Eocene. Besides, the complex migrated from North America to Europe via the North Atlantic Land Bridge and then migrated further to Africa. In East Asia, it first appeared in Markam on the Qinghai-Tibetan Plateau, and then dispersed to other regions of Asia.

U2 - 10.1007/s11430-019-9477-8

DO - 10.1007/s11430-019-9477-8

M3 - Journal article

VL - 63

SP - 224

EP - 234

JO - Science China Earth Sciences

JF - Science China Earth Sciences

SN - 1674-7313

IS - 2

ER -