The fossil recordand evolution of freshwater plants : a review

dc.contributor.author
Martín-Closas, Carles
dc.contributor.author
Universitat de Barcelona. Departament d'Estratigrafia, Paleontologia i Geociències Marines
dc.date.issued
2003
dc.identifier
https://ddd.uab.cat/record/86157
dc.identifier
urn:10.1344/105.000001619
dc.identifier
urn:oai:ddd.uab.cat:86157
dc.identifier
urn:articleid:16965728v1n4p315
dc.identifier
urn:oai:raco.cat:article/82179
dc.identifier
urn:oai:revistes.ub.edu:article/1824
dc.description.abstract
Palaeobotany applied to freshwater plants is an emerging field of palaeontology. Hydrophytic plants reveal evolutionary trends of their own, clearly distinct from those of the terrestrial and marine flora. During the Precambrian, two groups stand out in the fossil record of freshwater plants: the Cyanobacteria (stromatolites) in benthic environments and the prasinophytes (leiosphaeridian acritarchs) in transitional planktonic environments. During the Palaeozoic, green algae (Chlorococcales, Zygnematales, charophytes and some extinct groups) radiated and developed the widest range of morphostructural patterns known for these groups. Between the Permian and Early Cretaceous, charophytes dominated macrophytic associations, with the consequence that over tens of millions of years, freshwater flora bypassed the dominance of vascular plants on land. During the Early Cretaceous, global extension of the freshwater environments is associated with diversification of the flora, including new charophyte families and the appearance of aquatic angiosperms and ferns for the first time. Mesozoic planktonic assemblages retained their ancestral composition that was dominated by coenobial Chlorococcales, until the appearance of freshwater dinoflagellates in the Early Cretaceous. In the Late Cretaceous, freshwater angiosperms dominated almost all macrophytic communities worldwide. The Tertiary was characterised by the diversification of additional angiosperm and aquatic fern lineages, which resulted in the first differentiation of aquatic plant biogeoprovinces. hytoplankton also diversified during the Eocene with the development of freshwater diatoms and chrysophytes. Diatoms, which were exclusively marine during tens of millions of years, were dominant over the Chlorococcales during Neogene and in later assemblages. During the Quaternary, aquatic plant communities suffered from the effects of eutrophication, paludification and acidification, which were the result of the combined impact of glaciation and anthropogenic disturbance.
dc.format
application/pdf
dc.language
eng
dc.publisher
dc.relation
Geologica acta ; Vol. 1, Núm. 4 (2003), p. 315-338
dc.rights
open access
dc.rights
Aquest document està subjecte a una llicència d'ús Creative Commons. Es permet la reproducció total o parcial, la distribució, la comunicació pública de l'obra i la creació d'obres derivades, sempre i quan aquestes es distribueixin sota la mateixa llicència que regula l'obra original i es reconegui l'autoria.
dc.rights
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
dc.subject
Freshwater algae
dc.subject
Aquatic angiosperms
dc.subject
Charophytes
dc.subject
Evolution
dc.subject
Palaeoecology
dc.title
The fossil recordand evolution of freshwater plants : a review
dc.type
Article


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