Abstract

Acrostichum intertrappeum sp. nov., a permineralized aerial stem with helically arranged petioles and roots in organic connection, is described from the Deccan Intertrappean beds of Nawargaon, District Wardha, Maharashtra, India and forms the first and the oldest record of its kind. The stem is covered with a thick ramentum of large multicellular scales and is characterized by a three angled dictyostele enclosing a few medullary bundles. The petioles are helically arranged and the vascular morphology is distinct with abaxial horseshoe-shaped ring, adaxial linear row and central dorso-ventrally elongated ring. The roots have hexarch steles and aerenchymatous cortex with large air cavities in rings. Occurrence of Acrostichum along with coastal palms, mangroves and marsh plants described earlier from this region and nearby locations suggests the north-western shore of the Deccan was linked to the equatorial ocean (South Western Tethys Sea) probably through the Narmada Valley during the deposition of Intertrappean sediments. Morphological features and anatomical characters of the fossil reveal that Acrostichum grew in marsh swamp environment or on mud flats of back water areas of the coastal environment prevailing a tropical humid climate when the Deccan region was almost at an equatorial position during the Late Cretaceous period. This new record further adds to a growing body of data on the diversification of polypodiaceous ferns that point to a much earlier crown group radiation of the group than previously thought.

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