Decombeix Anne-Laure, Hiller Philipp, Bomfleur Benjamin
AMAP, Université de Montpellier, CIRAD, CNRS, INRAe, IRD, Montpellier, France.
Institute for Geology and Paleontology, Paleobotany Group, University of Münster, Germany.
Ann Bot. 2025 Feb 19;135(3):403-416. doi: 10.1093/aob/mcae106.
The complexity of fossil forest ecosystems is difficult to reconstruct due to the fragmentary nature of the fossil record. However, detailed morpho-anatomical studies of well-preserved individual fossils can provide key information on tree growth and ecology, including in biomes with no modern analogue, such as the lush forests that developed in the polar regions during past greenhouse climatic episodes.
We describe an unusual-looking stem from Middle Triassic (~240 Ma) deposits of Antarctica with over 100 very narrow growth rings and conspicuous persistent vascular traces through the wood. Sections of the specimen were prepared using the cellulose acetate peel technique to determine its systematic affinities and analyse its growth.
The new fossil shows similarities to the form genus Woodworthia and with conifer stems from the Triassic of Antarctica, and is assigned to the conifers. Vascular traces are interpreted as those of small branches retained on the trunk. Growth-ring analyses reveal one of the slowest growth rates reported in the fossil record, with an average of 0.2 mm per season. While the tree was growing within the Triassic polar circle, sedimentological data and growth-ring information from other fossil trees, including from the same locality, support the presence of favourable conditions in the region.
The specimen is interpreted as a dwarf conifer tree that grew under a generally favourable regional climate but whose growth was suppressed due to stressful local site conditions. This is the first time that a tree with suppressed growth is identified as such in the fossil record, providing new insights on the structure of polar forests under greenhouse climates and, more generally, on the complexity of tree communities in deep time.
由于化石记录的碎片化,化石森林生态系统的复杂性难以重建。然而,对保存完好的单个化石进行详细的形态解剖学研究,可以提供有关树木生长和生态的关键信息,包括在没有现代类似物的生物群落中,例如在过去温室气候时期极地地区发育的茂密森林。
我们描述了一个来自南极洲中三叠世(约2.4亿年前)沉积物的外观异常的茎干,它有100多个非常狭窄的生长轮,并且木材中有明显的持久维管束痕迹。使用醋酸纤维素剥离技术制备了标本切片,以确定其系统亲缘关系并分析其生长情况。
新化石与形态属伍德沃斯木属以及南极洲三叠纪的针叶树茎干相似,被归类为针叶树。维管束痕迹被解释为保留在树干上的小树枝的痕迹。生长轮分析揭示了化石记录中报道的最慢生长速度之一,平均每个季节0.2毫米。虽然这棵树生长在三叠纪极圈内,但来自其他化石树木(包括来自同一地点)的沉积学数据和生长轮信息支持该地区存在有利条件。
该标本被解释为一棵矮针叶树,它生长在总体有利的区域气候下,但由于当地的压力条件其生长受到抑制。这是首次在化石记录中鉴定出一棵生长受抑制的树,为温室气候下极地森林的结构,以及更广泛地说,为远古时期树木群落的复杂性提供了新的见解。