Evidence for coal forest refugia in the seasonally dry Pennsylvanian tropical lowlands of the Illinois Basin, USA

The Moscovian plant macroflora at Cottage Grove southeastern Illinois, USA, is a key example of Pennsylvanian (323–299 Million years ago) dryland vegetation. There is currently no palynological data from the same stratigraphic horizons as the plant macrofossils, leaves and other vegetative and repro...

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Main Authors: Cindy V. Looy, Robert A. Stevenson, Thomas B. Van Hoof, Luke Mander
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2014-11-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/630.pdf
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spelling doaj-a18c9fc2a8864a5fb46ebd7f072425ac2020-11-25T00:45:17ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592014-11-012e63010.7717/peerj.630630Evidence for coal forest refugia in the seasonally dry Pennsylvanian tropical lowlands of the Illinois Basin, USACindy V. Looy0Robert A. Stevenson1Thomas B. Van Hoof2Luke Mander3Department of Integrative Biology and Museum of Paleontology, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USADepartment of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA, USATNO-Geobiology, Utrecht, The NetherlandsCollege of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter, Devon, UKThe Moscovian plant macroflora at Cottage Grove southeastern Illinois, USA, is a key example of Pennsylvanian (323–299 Million years ago) dryland vegetation. There is currently no palynological data from the same stratigraphic horizons as the plant macrofossils, leaves and other vegetative and reproductive structures, at this locality. Consequently, reconstructions of the standing vegetation at Cottage Grove from these sediments lack the complementary information and a more regional perspective that can be provided by sporomorphs (prepollen, pollen, megaspores and spores). In order to provide this, we have analysed the composition of fossil sporomorph assemblages in two rock samples taken from macrofossil-bearing inter-coal shale at Cottage Grove. Our palynological data differ considerably in composition and in the dominance-diversity profile from the macrofossil vegetation at this locality. Walchian conifers and pteridosperms are common elements in the macroflora, but are absent in the sporomorph assemblages. Reversely, the sporomorph assemblages at Cottage Grove comprise 17 spore taxa (∼16% and ∼63% of the total assemblages) that are known from the lycopsid orders Isoetales, Lepidodendrales and Selaginallales, while Cottage Grove’s macrofloral record fails to capture evidence of a considerable population of coal forest lycopsids. We interpret our results as evidence that the Pennsylvanian dryland glacial landscape at Cottage Grove included fragmented populations of wetland plants living in refugia.https://peerj.com/articles/630.pdfRefugiaPennsylvanianPaleoecologyVegetation reconstruction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cindy V. Looy
Robert A. Stevenson
Thomas B. Van Hoof
Luke Mander
spellingShingle Cindy V. Looy
Robert A. Stevenson
Thomas B. Van Hoof
Luke Mander
Evidence for coal forest refugia in the seasonally dry Pennsylvanian tropical lowlands of the Illinois Basin, USA
PeerJ
Refugia
Pennsylvanian
Paleoecology
Vegetation reconstruction
author_facet Cindy V. Looy
Robert A. Stevenson
Thomas B. Van Hoof
Luke Mander
author_sort Cindy V. Looy
title Evidence for coal forest refugia in the seasonally dry Pennsylvanian tropical lowlands of the Illinois Basin, USA
title_short Evidence for coal forest refugia in the seasonally dry Pennsylvanian tropical lowlands of the Illinois Basin, USA
title_full Evidence for coal forest refugia in the seasonally dry Pennsylvanian tropical lowlands of the Illinois Basin, USA
title_fullStr Evidence for coal forest refugia in the seasonally dry Pennsylvanian tropical lowlands of the Illinois Basin, USA
title_full_unstemmed Evidence for coal forest refugia in the seasonally dry Pennsylvanian tropical lowlands of the Illinois Basin, USA
title_sort evidence for coal forest refugia in the seasonally dry pennsylvanian tropical lowlands of the illinois basin, usa
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2014-11-01
description The Moscovian plant macroflora at Cottage Grove southeastern Illinois, USA, is a key example of Pennsylvanian (323–299 Million years ago) dryland vegetation. There is currently no palynological data from the same stratigraphic horizons as the plant macrofossils, leaves and other vegetative and reproductive structures, at this locality. Consequently, reconstructions of the standing vegetation at Cottage Grove from these sediments lack the complementary information and a more regional perspective that can be provided by sporomorphs (prepollen, pollen, megaspores and spores). In order to provide this, we have analysed the composition of fossil sporomorph assemblages in two rock samples taken from macrofossil-bearing inter-coal shale at Cottage Grove. Our palynological data differ considerably in composition and in the dominance-diversity profile from the macrofossil vegetation at this locality. Walchian conifers and pteridosperms are common elements in the macroflora, but are absent in the sporomorph assemblages. Reversely, the sporomorph assemblages at Cottage Grove comprise 17 spore taxa (∼16% and ∼63% of the total assemblages) that are known from the lycopsid orders Isoetales, Lepidodendrales and Selaginallales, while Cottage Grove’s macrofloral record fails to capture evidence of a considerable population of coal forest lycopsids. We interpret our results as evidence that the Pennsylvanian dryland glacial landscape at Cottage Grove included fragmented populations of wetland plants living in refugia.
topic Refugia
Pennsylvanian
Paleoecology
Vegetation reconstruction
url https://peerj.com/articles/630.pdf
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