Published September 15, 2017 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Frangula priabonica Doweld 2017, sp. nov.

Authors/Creators

Description

3.6. Frangula priabonica Doweld, sp. nov.

Frangula hordwellensis Chandler (1961: 131), nom. inval. (Art. 36.1(a)).

Description:—The fruit pyrenaceous, 6.25 mm long and 4 mm wide, having two pyrenes. Each pyrene containing a single seed closely embraced by the endocarp except the proximal end, subcircular or broadly oboval, much flattened, with marked excavation at the base where the hilar end of the seed projects beyond the endocarp; apex slightly emarginate. One flattened surface with a median longitudinal suture. Endocarp formed superficially of somewhat irregular-sized equiaxial cells, 0.012 –0.016 mm in diam., the smallest towards the base. Inner layers formed of oblique fibres giving a striate appearance. Seeds anatropous with a marginal raphe, agreeing in shape with endocarp. Seed where exposed at the base having a deep hilar excavation, narrowly oval in outline and provided with a low median ridge parallel with the long axis of the excavation and the broad surfaces of the seed. Testa 0.1 mm thick at margin, but 0.05 mm at the middle of a broad surface, formed superficially of convex finely digitate cells about 0.025 mm, columnar in section, the columns having slightly sinuous outlines due to the convexity of these cells piled one upon another. Tegmen thin, finely striate, formed of elongate cells which produce parallel striae [emended after Chandler 1961, 1963].

Type:—V. 42156 (Natural History Museum, London, U.K.) – figured by Chandler (1961: pl. 27, fig. 85).

Geography:—Hordle [Hordwell] Cliffs, South Hampshire, U.K.

Stratigraphy:—Upper Eocene (Priabonian = Headon Hill Formation).

Status:—Fruits (endocarps).

Eponymy:—From Priabonian, a geological stage of the Upper Eocene (known fossil plant record).

IFPNI registration record:— 454EAEFA-4611-4435-940F-46BFA2286C36.

Note:—As Chandler (1961: 131) clearly did not accept the genus Frangula, treating the group as a subgenus of Rhamnus, then she cannot be accepting “ Frangula hordwellensis ” and so the fossil-species was not validly published under Art. 36.1(a). Furthermore, she clearly accepted the assignment of the species to Rhamnus, but failed to definitely associate “ hordwellensis ” with the generic name Rhamnus and so “ Rhamnus hordwellensis ” is not validly published too under Art. 35.2 (cf also Art. 35 Ex. 6). The fossil-species was not also validated later (Chandler 1963: 100) since she continued to associate “ hordwellensis ” with the subgeneric name Rhamnus subgen. Frangula (Miller 1754: [517]) Hartig (1851: 482), but explicitly accepted the assignment of the species to Rhamnus. “ Rhamnus hordwellensis ” was just mentioned without validation by Gregor (1977: 213). The fossil-species is validated here with a new epithet “ priabonica ” reflecting the narrow geological time of known plant fossil record. The fossil-species is most likely compared with extant Frangula purshiana.

Notes

Published as part of Doweld, Alexander B., 2017, New names of fossil Atadinus, Endotropis and Frangula (Rhamnaceae), pp. 194-200 in Phytotaxa 321 (2) on pages 196-197, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.321.2.4, http://zenodo.org/record/13697436

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Scientific name authorship
Doweld
Kingdom
Plantae
Phylum
Tracheophyta
Order
Rosales
Family
Rhamnaceae
Genus
Frangula
Species
priabonica
Taxon rank
species
Taxonomic status
sp. nov.
Taxonomic concept label
Frangula priabonica Doweld, 2017

References

  • Chandler, M. E. J. (1961) Flora of the Lower Headon beds of Hampshire and the Isle of Wight. Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History), Series Geology 5: 91 - 158. Available from: http: // biodiversitylibrary. org / page / 36368134 (accessed 1 September 2017)
  • Chandler, M. E. J. (1963) The Lower Tertiary Floras of Southern England, vol. 3, Flora of the Bournemouth beds; the Boscombe, and the Highcliff sands. British Museum (Natural History), London, 176 pp. https: // doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. title. 110079
  • Miller, Ph. (1754) The Gardener's Dictionary: containing the methods of cultivating and improving all sorts of trees, plants, and flowers, for the kitchen, fruit, and pleasure gardens, as also those which are used in medicine: with directions for the culture of vineyards, and making of wine in England, ed. 4, corrected and enlarged. Vols 1 - 3. Printed for the author and sold by John and James Rivington, London, 1582 pp. https: // doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. title. 79061
  • Hartig, T. (1851) Vollstandige Naturgeschichte der forstlichen Culturpflanzen Deutschlands, Heft 15. A. Forstner'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Berlin, pp. 469 - 580. https: // doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. title. 49844
  • Gregor, H. - J. (1977) Subtropische Elemente im europaischen Tertiar II (Fruktifikationen). Palaontologische Zeitschrift 51: 199 - 206. https: // doi. org / 10.1007 / BF 02986569