Umaltolepis Explained

Umaltolepis is an extinct genus of seed plant, known from the Early Jurassic to Early Cretaceous of Asia. Within the form classification system used within paleobotany, it refers to the seed-bearing reproductive structures, which grew on woody plants with strap-shaped Ginkgo-like leaves assigned to the genus Pseudotorellia.

Description

Umaltolepis consisted of a thick, resinous umbrella-like four-lobed cupule borne on a stalk-like column, which was attached to the tip of a short shoot. The cupule is typically up to 2cm (01inches) in length, and up to 1cm (00inches) in width. The four lobes enclosed the column down to a flange-like flared structure. Near the top of the column near to the attachment of the cupule, the structure became four angled, with each of the four faces bearing a loosely attached winged seed. The Umaltolepis plant was probably wind-pollinated, likely involving a hanging pollination drop. The seeds are thin-walled and were probably wind-dispersed, with the cupule likely serving to protect the fragile seeds during their development. The cupule split open to release the seeds when ripe. The Pseudotorellia leaves are strap-shaped and somewhat resemble to those of Ginkgo, bearing a number (typically 4 to 8) of parallel veins, and are generally a few mm wide at their widest, and several centimetres long. The Pseudotorellia leaves were borne on clusters at the apex of short shoots. These shoots were typically covered in bark bearing bud scales and abscission scars, arranged in a whorl-like pattern.[1]

Ecology

The Umaltolepis-Pseudotorellia plant is known to have grown in peat swamps, as well as fluvio-lacustrine environments.

Taxonomy

Umaltolepis was first proposed by Krassilov in 1970,[2] but was not properly described until 1972. It was assigned to its own family, Umaltolepidaceae by Zhou in 1991[3] (often misspelled Umaltolepidiaceae)

Umaltolepis is probably closely related to the seed-bearing structure Vladimaria from the Middle Jurassic of Russia, though its relationship to other seed plants is uncertain. The structure of Umaltolepis has been noted to be similar to those of some extinct Peltasperms and Umkomasiales,[4] while leaves and the attachment of the leaves to the stem is strongly similar to that of living Ginkgo. It has either been assigned to the order Vladimariales alongside Vladimaria as possible members of Ginkgoopsida, or to Ginkgoales sensu lato.

Species

Notes and References

  1. Dong . Chong . Shi . Gongle . Zhang . Xiaoqing . Wang . Zixi . Wang . Yongdong . November 2022 . Middle-Late Jurassic fossils from Northeast China confirm the affiliation of Umaltolepis seed-bearing structures and Pseudotorellia leaves . Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology . en . 306 . 104763 . 10.1016/j.revpalbo.2022.104763. 251917169 .
  2. V.A. Krassilov Approach to the classification of Mesozoic “Ginkgoalean” plants from Siberia Palaeobotanist, 18 (1970), pp. 12-19
  3. Zhiyan . Zhou . July 1991 . Phylogeny and evolutionary trends of Mesozoic ginkgoaleans — a preliminary assessment . Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology . en . 68 . 3–4 . 203–216 . 10.1016/0034-6667(91)90024-W.
  4. Herrera . Fabiany . Shi . Gongle . Ichinnorov . Niiden . Takahashi . Masamichi . Bugdaeva . Eugenia V. . Herendeen . Patrick S. . Crane . Peter R. . 2017-03-21 . The presumed ginkgophyte Umaltolepis has seed-bearing structures resembling those of Peltaspermales and Umkomasiales . Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences . en . 114 . 12 . 10.1073/pnas.1621409114 . 0027-8424 . 5373332 . 28265050. free .
  5. VA Krassilov, Mesozoic Flora from the Bureja River (Ginkgoales and Czekanowskiales) (Nauka, Moscow), p 115 (in Russian). (1972).
  6. Nosova . Natalya . Kostina . Elena . September 2022 . New findings of the female reproductive structures of Umaltolepis Krassilov and associated leaves of Pseudotorellia Florin in the Lower Cretaceous of Mongolia . Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology . en . 304 . 104696 . 10.1016/j.revpalbo.2022.104696. 249143829 .
  7. HJ Schweitzer, M Kirchner, Die Rhäto-Jurassischen Floren des Iran und Afghanistans. 8. Ginkgophyta. Palaeontographica B 237, 1–58 (1995).
  8. ZQ Wang, Plant kingdom. Palaeontological Atlas of North China II Mesozoic, eds Tianjin Institute of Geology and Mineral Resources (Geological Publishing House, Beijing), pp 223–296, 367–384 (in Chinese). (1984).
  9. F Chen, XY Meng, SQ Ren, CL Wu, The Early Cretaceous Flora of Fuxin Basin and Tiefa Basin, Liaoning Province (Geological Publishing House, Beijing), p 180 (in Chinese). (1988).
  10. Nosova . Natalya . October 2020 . Female reproductive structures of Umaltolepis Krassilov and associated short shoots, buds and leaves of Pseudotorellia Florin from the Middle Jurassic of Angren, Uzbekistan . Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology . en . 281 . 104266 . 10.1016/j.revpalbo.2020.104266. 219437430 .
  11. Nosova . Natalya . June 2021 . Female reproductive structures of Umaltolepis Krassilov and associated leaves of Pseudotorellia Florin from the Middle Jurassic of East Siberia, Russia . Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology . en . 289 . 104412 . 10.1016/j.revpalbo.2021.104412. 233790779 .
  12. Dong . Chong . Zhou . Zhiyan . Zhang . Bole . Wang . Yongdong . Shi . Gongle . December 2019 . Umaltolepis and associated Pseudotorellia leaves from the Middle Jurassic of Yima in Henan Province, Central China . Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology . en . 271 . 104111 . 10.1016/j.revpalbo.2019.104111. 202192390 .