Abstract

The first fossil flowers of Neotropical Urticaceae (Boehmerieae) are described from the Dominican Republic and Mexico as belonging to a new genus, Ekrixanthera. Ekrixanthera hispaniolae sp. nov. from Dominican amber has pentamerous staminate flowers on short pedicels with a pilose pistillode and heteromorphic pilose tepals: two are clavate and three linear. Ekrixanthera ehecatli sp. nov. has pentamerous staminate flowers lacking pedicels, a pistillode with greatly reduced pilosity, glabrous and heteromorphic tepals with two linear and three wedge-shaped with truncate tips. The presence or absence of a pedicel, heterotrophic condition of the tepals, and the presence or absence of pilosity of the pistillode and tepals separate the two species. Those characters, together with the pentamerous flowers separate both fossil species from extant genera. The floral structures indicate explosive pollen release and pollination by wind (anemophily). Pistillate flowers have not been found for this usually dioecious tribe. Lepidopteran herbivory is suggested by a damaged stipule in one specimen and a nymphalid butterfly (Vanessa-like) caterpillar that may have used Ekrixanthera as a food plant is illustrated. The fossils establish an early lineage of Boehmerieae with characteristic explosive pollen release and perhaps associated herbivorous insects in the West Indies and North America during the mid-Tertiary.

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