Abstract

Conspicuous spheroidal inclusions are infrequently encountered in saccate gymnosperm pollen grains (e.g. Striatopodocarpites subcircularis, Striatopodocarpites multistriatus, Faunipollenites varius, Ibisporites diplosaccus, Scheuringipollenites maximus, Barakarites indicus) from the Upper Permian (±253–275 Ma) of the Godavari Graben, Andhra Pradesh, India. These structures, which occur singly or in clusters of two to eight in the corpus of the pollen grain, are 15–45 µm in diameter, smooth-walled, and usually translucent; ~30% of the specimens show a pre-formed circular opening in the wall. The biological affinities of the inclusions remain elusive. The interpretation of similar structures from the Raniganj Coalfield (Upper Permian, India) as components of the microgametophyte is implausible for several reasons. Rather, these pollen grains represent highly likely host substrates and habitats for microorganisms, and it is, therefore, probable that the inclusions are the remains of a pollen-colonising organism, perhaps the endobiotic zoosporangia of a chytrid or member in the Hyphochytridiomycota.

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