An Eocene Tar Spot on a Fossil Palm and Its Fungal Hyperparasite
Loading...
Date
Citation for Previous Publication
An Eocene Tar Spot on a Fossil Palm and Its Fungal Hyperparasite
R. S. Currah, R. A. Stockey and B. A. LePage
Mycologia , Vol. 90, No. 4 (Jul. - Aug., 1998), pp. 667-673
Link to Related Item
Abstract
Description
Two ascomycetes from the middle Eocene (48.7 million yr b.p.) Princeton chert are described. Palaeoserenomyces allenbyensis gen. et sp. nov. consists of long, loculate stromata of distinctive columnar cells beneath the epidermis of the extinct fan palm, Uhlia allenbyensis. The sporogenous locules are empty but stromatal features and locule shape are similar to extant Serenomyces, a genus in the Phyllachorales that forms leaf spots on coryphoid palms. The locules of P allenbyensis contain circular structures that are interpreted as intralocular ascomata of a mycoparasite, Cryptodidymosphaerites princetonensis gen. et sp. nov. Two-celled ascospores in uniseriate rows are similar to the genus Didymosphaeria of the Melanommatales. These fossils are compared to Didymosphaeria conoidea, an extant mycoparasite of stromatic ascomycetes. The large number of exquisitely preserved fungal structures on taxonomically defined hosts in the Princeton chert provides a unique opportunity for studying the diversity of microfungi in Tertiary paleoenvironments.
Item Type
http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501 http://purl.org/coar/version/c_970fb48d4fbd8a85
Alternative
License
Other License Text / Link
Copyright 1998 by The New York Botanical Garden, Bronx, NY 10458-5126
Language
en
