Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, CTPA, Panama City, Panama.
Am J Bot. 2008 Dec;95(12):1569-83. doi: 10.3732/ajb.0800172. Epub 2008 Nov 7.
Both the fossil record and molecular data support a long evolutionary history for the Araceae. Although the family is diverse in tropical America today, most araceous fossils, however, have been recorded from middle and high latitudes. Here, we report fossil leaves of Araceae from the middle-late Paleocene of northern Colombia, and review fossil araceous pollen grains from the same interval. Two of the fossil leaf species are placed in the new fossil morphogenus Petrocardium Herrera, Jaramillo, Dilcher, Wing et Gomez-N gen. nov.; these fossils are very similar in leaf morphology to extant Anthurium; however, their relationship to the genus is still unresolved. A third fossil leaf type from Cerrejón is recognized as a species of the extant genus Montrichardia, the first fossil record for this genus. These fossils inhabited a coastal rainforest ∼60-58 million years ago with broadly similar habitat preferences to modern Araceae.
化石记录和分子数据都支持天南星科的悠久进化历史。尽管该科在今天的热带美洲具有多样性,但大多数天南星科化石却记录于中高纬度地区。在这里,我们报告了哥伦比亚北部中晚古新世的天南星科化石叶,并回顾了同一时期的天南星科花粉化石。两个化石叶种被归入新的化石形态属 Petrocardium Herrera、Jaramillo、Dilcher、Wing 和 Gomez-N gen. nov.;这些化石在叶片形态上与现存的 Anthurium 非常相似;然而,它们与该属的关系仍未解决。来自 Cerrejón 的第三种化石叶类型被认定为现存属 Montrichardia 的一个种,这是该属的第一个化石记录。这些化石生活在大约 60-5800 万年前的沿海雨林中,其生境偏好与现代天南星科相似。