Microcachrys

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Microcachrys
Microcachrys tetragona, Illustration.
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Gymnospermae
Division: Pinophyta
Class: Pinopsida
Order:
Araucariales
Family: Podocarpaceae
Genus: Microcachrys
Hook.f.
Species:
M. tetragona
Binomial name
Microcachrys tetragona

Microcachrys tetragona, known as creeping pine or creeping strawberry pine, is a

Diselma archeri (Cupressaceae). It shares the common name Creeping pine with several other plants
. Females produce tiny, red, edible berries in summer.

foliage

Fossil record and paleoendemism

Microcachrys has been called one of the most spectacular cases of paleoendemism. It is a known relictual plant, being widespread in the past but now having a very restricted distribution.[3] The only extant species today, Microcachrys tetragona, produces a very distinctive pollen grain compared with other members of its family, Podocarpaceae, and records of fossil pollen from the genus have been recorded from all over the Southern Hemisphere throughout the Cenozoic, being found in Antarctica,[4] Australia,[5] the now sunken islands of the Ninetyeast Ridge of the Indian Ocean,[6] New Zealand,[7] southern Africa[8] and South America.[9] Ocean drillings in the Kerguelen Plateau near Heard Island have revealed conifer remains with twigs very similar in appearance to those of Microcachrys.[10]

The genus Microcachrys clearly had a very broad, Gondwanic distribution. But now, the sole surviving species, Microcachrys tetragona, is a shrub restricted to Tasmanian mountain thickets and boulder-fields.[11] The fossil record of Microcachrys is one of many compelling lines of evidence which points to the highly dynamic and changing Southern Hemisphere vegetation through the Cenozoic since the break up of Gondwana.

References

  1. .
  2. ^ Carpenter, Raymond J., et al. "Leaf fossils of the ancient Tasmanian relict Microcachrys (Podocarpaceae) from New Zealand." American Journal of Botany 98.7 (2011): 1164-1172
  3. ^ Truswell, E. M., and M. K. Macphail. "Polar forests on the edge of extinction: what does the fossil spore and pollen evidence from East Antarctica say?." Australian Systematic Botany 22.2 (2009): 57-106.
  4. ^ Macphail, M. K., N. F. Alley, E. M. Truswell, and I. R. K. Sluiter. 1994. Early Tertiary vegetation: evidence from spores and pollen. In R. S. Hill [ed.], History of the Australian vegetation: Cretaceous to Recent, 189–261. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK.
  5. ^ Kemp, E. M., and W. K. Harris. 1977. The palynology of early Tertiary sediments, Ninetyeast Ridge, Indian Ocean. Palaeontological Association of London. Special Papers in Palaeontology 19: 1–69.
  6. ^ Raine, J. I., D. C. Mildenhall, and E. M. Kennedy. 2008. New Zealand fossil spores and pollen: an illustrated catalogue, 3rd ed. GNS Science Miscellaneous Series No. 4. GNS Science, Lower Hutt, New Zealand. Website "What we do. Earth History : Institute of Geological and Nuclear Sciences Limited". Archived from the original on 2005-12-30. Retrieved 2015-02-20. spore_pollen/catalog/index.htm [accessed 6 November 2010].
  7. ^ Coetzee, J. A., and J. Muller. 1984. The phytogeographic significance of some extinct Gondwana pollen types from the Tertiary of the southwestern Cape (South Africa). Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden 71: 1088–1099.
  8. ^ Barreda, V. 1997. Palynomorph assemblage of the Chenque Formation, Late Oligocene?—Miocene from Golfo San Jorge Basin, Patagonia, Argentina. Part 2: Gymnosperm and colpate pollen. Ameghiniana 34: 81–92.
  9. ^ "Ocean Drilling Program Leg 183 Scientific Results: Mid-Cretaceous Paleobotany and Palynology of the Central Kerguelen Plateau, Southern Indian Ocean (ODP Leg 183, Site 1138)". www-odp.tamu.edu. Retrieved 2022-11-01.
  10. ^ Carpenter, Raymond J., et al. "Leaf fossils of the ancient Tasmanian relict Microcachrys (Podocarpaceae) from New Zealand." American Journal of Botany 98.7 (2011): 1164-1172

External links