Abstract

A new species of Cardiocarpus from the Sim River Basin in the southern Urals of Russia is the first anatomically preserved cardiocarpalean ovule from the Permian of the Angara floral province. Specimens are preserved in a soft organic limestone with large numbers of juvenile bactritoid protoconchs. Ovules are roughly ellipsoidal in the major plane, up to 6.0–7.5 mm in length and 5.3 mm in width, with a diminutive wing and a rounded chalaza. The outer surface of the ovules is smooth. In longitudinal sections, two vascular tissue channels traverse the sclerotesta at the chalaza, and appear to extend to near the apex within each wing. There is a simple, dome-shaped pollen chamber at the apex, which lies below a narrow micropyle. The sclerotesta consists of one or two layers of longitudinally orientated cells at the interior, and sclereids that are radially elongated towards the periphery. The sarcotesta is incompletely preserved, but displays an outer layer of cells that are somewhat elongated towards the long axis of the ovule. Numerical cladistic analysis reveals little correlation between the structure of cardiocarpalean morphotaxa and the phylogenetic relationships of the plants that produced them, where affinities are known. Cardiocarpus angarensis sp. nov. enriches our understanding of Permian spermatophytes in temperate climates of the Northern Hemisphere, and reveals that ovules similar to those of Euramerican and Cathaysian provinces characterized an Angaran spermatophyte. Journal compilation © 2007 The Linnean Society of London, Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2007, 155, 297–305. No claim to original US government works.

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