Smilax sp.

Stults, DZ & Axsmith, BJ, 2015, New plant fossil records and paleoclimate analyses of the late Pliocene Citronelle Formation flora, U. S. Gulf Coast, Palaeontologia Electronica (New York, N. Y.: 1991) 2 (6), pp. 1-35 : 21

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.26879/550

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039E0517-F678-FFAB-D2C1-3E80FC21FE8A

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Smilax sp.
status

 

Smilax sp.

Figure 8.2–8.3 View FIGURE 8

Description. One partial leaf represents Smilax . Margin is entire. Primary venation is basal acrodromous with five primary veins. Secondary veins are excurrent, and many arch from their respective primary veins. An intramarginal secondary vein is present in the basal region. Tertiary and quaternary veins are irregular reticulate ( Figure 8.3 View FIGURE 8 ).

Site occurrence. Lambert Station.

Remarks. There are 350 species of Smilax , 20 in the flora of North America, about half of which occur in the southeastern United States. Although the family is mainly pantropical, some species occur in southern South America, New Zealand, and temperate areas of the northern hemisphere (Vinnersten and Bremer, 2001). Smilax leaves have been described from middle Eocene sediments of western Tennessee, ( Dilcher and Lott, 2005).

Kingdom

Plantae

Phylum

Tracheophyta

Class

Liliopsida

Order

Liliales

Family

Smilacaceae

Genus

Smilax

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