Ditrichaceae LIMPR.

Bomfleur, Benjamin, Hedenäs, Lars, Friis, Else Marie, Crane, Peter R., Raunsgaard, Kaj, Pedersen, Mendes, Mário Miguel & Kvaček, Jiří, 2023, Fossil Mosses From The Early Cretaceous Catefica Mesofossil Flora, Portugal - A Window Into The Mesozoic History Of Bryophytes, Fossil Imprint 79 (2), pp. 103-125 : 114-116

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.37520/fi.2023.006

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/1A34ED3F-F330-FFAA-FC46-36F1FE47E855

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Ditrichaceae LIMPR.
status

 

cf. Ditrichaceae LIMPR. View in CoL

In addition to the fragments of moss shoots described above a single spore capsule (S266084, fig. 9) is known but cannot be linked to any of the vegetative remains. The spore capsule is 1.7 mm long, including 0.2 mm remaining of the lid ( Text-fig. 9a, b View Text-fig ). Externally the spore capsule is well preserved ( Text-fig. 9a–d View Text-fig ) but internal details are unclear

( Text-fig. 9e, f View Text-fig ). The apex of the operculum is also not present, which precludes more exact systematic placement.

Several stomata are present at the base of the spore capsule

( Text-fig. 9d View Text-fig ), which precludes close relationship with extant

Tetraphis HEDW. , which has spore capsules of similar shape but that lack stomata. The spore capsule certainly belongs to a species of acrocarpous moss and is similar to spore capsules of many members of extant Ditrichaceae or the

Pottiaceae . According to Liu et al. (2019) these two families both belong to Dicranales .

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Bryophyta

Class

Bryopsida

Order

Dicranales

Family

Ditrichaceae

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF