Evolutionary implications of stipule occurrence in Permo-Carboniferous wetland forests dominated by Psaroniaceae

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Abstract

Stipules are specialized appendages borne at the leaf base with roles as diverse as sheltering of delicate growing tissues from environmental exposure, vegetative propagation and dispersal, and modification into climbing hooks or protective spines. Stipules are widely present in extant vascular plants, but their origins in geological history remain obscure and must have involved convergent evolution more than once, perhaps as early as the late Paleozoic emergence of forested terrestrial ecosystems. Based on extraordinary collections from the early Permian Wuda Tuff Flora, the earliest known stipule structure in the plant kingdom has been identified in marattialean tree ferns Psaroniaceae, the dominant element of Permo-Carboniferous wetland forests. Psaroniaceous stipules are consistent with protection of juvenile fronds and the stem apex as well as retention of a functional role in mature and withered fronds. Furthermore, the continued and perhaps indeterminate growth and the fully laminated stipules invite speculation of a potential role in vegetative propagation following detachment from the parent frond. However, no direct fossil evidence of stipules acting as vegetative propagules is currently available.

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