Fraxinus sp.
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.26879/550 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039E0517-F663-FFB0-D2CA-3A15FBE4FEB7 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Fraxinus sp. |
status |
|
Fruit
Figure 5.5 View FIGURE 5
Description. A small (9.7 mm long, 4.1 mm wide) Fraxinus samara has been recovered from the Lambert Station site. A small part of the apical portion of the wing is missing. The fruit body is flattened, centrally positioned within the samara, and ~ 6.5 mm long. It is too fragmentary for meaningful specific comparisons.
Site occurrence. Lambert Station.
Remarks. Twenty native species of Fraxinus occur in North America, but only five of these ( F. americana , F. caroliniana , F. pennsylvanica , F. profunda , and F. quadrangulata ) occur in the southeastern United States. The earliest record of Fraxinus in North America is from the early Eocene of the west, and records continue into the middle Eocene Green River and Quilchana floras ( Brown, 1940; MacGinitie, 1941; Matthews and Brooke, 1971). Middle Eocene records of Fraxinus fruits have been documented in Tennessee ( Berry, 1916b; Call and Dilcher, 1992).
Leaflets
Figure 6.1–6.2 View FIGURE 6
Description. Two ovate leaflets of Fraxinus are recognized in recent collections from the Citronelle Formation flora. One is probably a terminal leaflet, as indicated by petiolule length (2.2 cm). The most complete leaf is 9 cm long and 3.5 cm wide (L:W ~ 2.5:1). Margins are unlobed, crenate/serrate. Leaflet bases are decurrent, acute, asymmetrical. Apices are acuminate, one with a drip tip. Primary venation framework is pinnate. Secondary venation is festooned semicraspedodromous. Secondary veins are decurrent, irregularly spaced, with inconsistent angles. A few intersecondaries are present. Tertiary veins are irregular reticulate, as are the fourth and fifth order veins ( Figure 6.2 View FIGURE 6 ). One order of teeth is present, straight or concave distally and convex proximally, between-teeth sinuses are angular to rounded. The course of the principal tooth vein terminates at the nadir of the super-adjacent sinus, consistent with several extant species of Fraxinus .
Site Occurrence. Scarborough School and Perdido Park.
Remarks. A poorly preserved leaflet attributed Fraxinus sp. was reported from the Lambert Station site by Berry (1916a), but this determination is uncertain and the specimen was not observed in the NMNH collections.
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