Abstract
A diverse assemblage of fossil conifer leaves was identified in calcareous marine concretions from the Lower Cretaceous (Valanginian–Hauterivian) Apple Bay locality, Vancouver Island. Of the hundreds of isolated leaf fragments, most show affinities to Pinaceae. Leaves with closest similarities to Picea (spruce) were studied using cellulose acetate peels. Picea-like leaves vary in cross-section from rhomboidal, pentagonal, triangular, to ovoid. One fused vascular bundle with a centrally located ray and abaxial sclerenchyma is surrounded by a circular endodermis and transfusion tissue. Mesophyll is plicate containing two lateral external resin canals surrounded by a sclerenchyma sheath. Hypodermal fibres are one to three layers thick, except in areas of stomata. Leaves are amphistomatic, with sunken guard cells. Vascular bundles are identical anatomically to Picea; however, plicate mesophyll is similar to that in leaves of Pinus. Extensive sclerenchyma in the hypodermis and surrounding resin canals differs from that in most extant Picea. The major difference between these leaves and those of Picea is leaf shape. These fossil leaves probably belong to an extinct pinaceous conifer, and are described as Midoriphyllum piceoides gen. et sp. nov. Similar evidence from Cretaceous seed cones suggests that like the angiosperms, the Pinaceae were undergoing rapid mosaic evolution during the Lower Cretaceous.
Published Version
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