Middle East fossils push back origin of key plant groups millions of years
Fósseis do Oriente Médio empurram para trás a origem dos principais grupos de plantas em milhões de anos
Reported in this week's issue of Science, the fossils push back the origins not just of podocarps,
but also of groups of seed ferns and cycadlike plants. Beyond altering
notions of plant evolution, the discoveries lend support to a
45-year-old idea that the tropics serve as a "cradle" of evolution.
"This is an exciting paper," says Douglas Soltis, a plant evolutionary
biologist at the University of Florida (UF) in Gainesville. By revealing
the richness of the Permian tropics, he adds, "The findings may also
help researchers decide where to look for crucial fossil discoveries."
Durante o Permiano, de 299 milhões a 251 milhões de anos atrás, as massas de terra da Terra se fundiram para formar um supercontinente, trazendo um clima mais frio e seco. As sinapsidas, consideradas antecessoras dos mamíferos, e sauropsídeos, ancestrais de répteis e aves, percorriam a paisagem. Usinas simples de produção de sementes já haviam aparecido no local. Árvores genealógicas reconstruídas a partir dos genomas de plantas vivas sugerem que grupos de plantas mais sofisticados também podem ter evoluído durante o Permiano, mas encontrar fósseis de plantas bem preservados daquela época tem sido difícil.
About 50 years ago, a German geologist described the Umm Irna
formation, a series of sedimentary layers exposed along the Jordanian
coast of the Dead Sea. Working at the site in the early 2000s,
paleontologist Abdalla Abu Hamad, now with the University of Jordan in
Amman, discovered some exquisitely preserved plants from Permian swamps
and drier lowlands.
After moving to the University of Münster in Germany for a Ph.D., he
teamed up with paleobotanists there to analyze hundreds of newly
collected plant fossils, including leaves, stems, and reproductive
organs. Many of the fossils preserve the ancient plants' cuticle, a waxy
surface layer that captures fine features, such as the leaf pores
called stomata. That made it possible for the team to positively
identify many of the plants.
"At first, we couldn't really believe our eyes," Benjamin
Bomfleur, a study co-author at the University of Münster, recalls. Many
were plants thought have gotten their start later in the Mesozoic, the
period when dinosaurs ruled. Along with the podocarps, they
identified corystosperms, seed ferns common in the dinosaur age but
extinct now, and cycadlike Bennettitales, another extinct group that had
flowerlike reproductive structures.
Such finds could help resolve an ongoing debate about why the tropics
have more species than colder latitudes do. Some have suggested that
species originate at many latitudes but are more likely to diversify in
the tropics, with its longer growing seasons, higher rainfall and
temperatures, and other features. But another theory proposes that most
plant—and animal—species actually got their start near the equator,
making the low latitudes an evolutionary "cradle" from which some
species migrate north and south. The new work "supports the idea of the
evolution cradle," Bomfleur says. Philip Mannion, a paleontologist at
Imperial College London agrees, but says the case is not fully settled.
"Our sampling of the fossil record is extremely patchy throughout
geological time and space," he cautions.
It's not clear how the newfound Permian plants made it through the
great dying, a 100,000-year period when, for reasons that are still
unclear, 90% of marine life and 70% of life on land disappeared. But
their presence in the Permian raises the possibility that other plant
groups thought to have later origins actually emerged then in the
tropics, says UF plant evolutionary biologist Pamela Soltis. If these
select plants survived the mass extinction, she says, "Perhaps the
communities they supported may have been more stable as well."
doi:10.1126/science.aaw4354
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