Abstract

Paleozoic pollen organs exhibit numerous morphological forms that have been arranged in categories based on their probable organization. Progymnosperm ancestors are characterized by three dimensional branching systems bearing pairs of terminal sporangia. Early Mississippian examples of seed fern fertile branches appear little modified from the progymnosperms. These pteridosperm microsporangia are nonsynangiate and thin walled with longitudinal dehiscence. By Upper Mississippian time all forms show sporangial clustering into large or small groups, with several taxa exhibiting radially symmetrical synangia. In the Lower Pennsylvanian all pollen organs are synangiate and appear to consist of a uniseriate ring of sporangia that either surround a central hollow, or are bilaterally flattened. Sporangial dehiscence in all forms is longitudinal and toward the center of the synangium. In bilateral synangia with no central hollow, the sporangia either separate laterally or effective dehiscence areas are restricted to the free apical portions of the sporangia. Callistophytacean synangia resemble the lyginopterid type, but are abaxial on laminar foliage. This family is thought to have evolved from the lyginopterids during the Early Pennsylvanian. Middle Pennsylvanian medullosan pollen organs are all radial and may be solitary, aggregated into groups, or fused into a large compound synangium. Several pollen organ types are reinterpreted, and the possible evolutionary relationships among the various Paleozoic pollen organ forms are discussed based on synangial organization, patterns of frond branching, and pollen or prepollen morphology.

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