Abstract

Phytocreneae (Icacinaceae) are a tribe of climbing plants distributed throughout tropical Afro-Eurasia and Papua New Guinea. There is a rich Cenozoic fossil record of the group with occurrences on all continents except Antarctica. Fossil evidence supports a Cretaceous origin but the biogeographic history of Phytocreneae remains unclear. We examined a silicified endocarp collected from the Danian (early Paleocene) Salamanca Formation at the Estancia Las Violetas locality. We investigated the internal structure using micro-CT scanning and compared the fossil with fruits of other living and fossil species. Finally, we explored the biogeographic history of the tribe graphically and discuss the implications of this discovery. The endocarp belongs to the fossil genus Palaeophytocrene. This new occurrence significantly expands the known geographic range of Phytocreneae in South America. Furthermore, this is the oldest (ca. 63 Ma) unequivocal evidence of the tribe in the southern hemisphere. The presence of Phytocreneae at Estancia Las Violetas confirms that these lianas occurred in mid-latitude forests by the early Paleocene, and it also reveals that the tribe likely survived the end-Cretaceous extinction event in southern South America. Future work on the tribe should include filling gaps in the Gondwanan record to test the hypothesis that Australasian lineages are related to American lineages via high-latitude dispersal.

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