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Araucariaceae

Araucariaceae – also known as araucarians – is an extremely ancient family of coniferous trees. The family achieved its maximum diversity during the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods, when it was distributed almost worldwide. Most of the Araucariaceae in the Northern Hemisphere vanished in the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event, and they are now largely confined to the Southern Hemisphere, except for a few species of Agathis in Southeast Asia.[1]

Araucariaceae
Temporal range: Early Jurassic–Present (possible Late Triassic records)
Araucaria angustifolia at Minas Gerais
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Gymnosperms
Division: Pinophyta
Class: Pinopsida
Order: Araucariales
Family: Araucariaceae
Henkel & W. Hochstetter
Type genus
Araucaria
Genera

Description

 
Tāne Mahuta ("Lord of the Forest"), a massive Agathis australis tree from New Zealand

Members of Araucariaceae are typically extremely tall evergreen trees,[2] reaching heights of 60 m (200 ft) or more.[3] They can also grow very large stem diameters; a New Zealand kauri tree (Agathis australis) named Tāne Mahuta ("The Lord of the Forest") has been measured at 45.2 m (148 ft) tall with a diameter at breast height of 491 cm (16.11 ft). Its total wood volume is calculated to be 516.7 m3 (18,250 cu ft),[4] making it the third-largest conifer after Sequoia and Sequoiadendron (both from the Cupressaceae subfamily Sequoioideae).[2]

The trunks are columnar and have relatively large piths with resinous cortices.[5] The branching is usually horizontal and tiered, arising regularly in whorls of three to seven branches or alternating in widely separated pairs.[6]

The leaves can be small, needle-like, and curved, or they can be large, broadly ovate, and flattened.[7] They are spirally arranged, persistent, and usually have parallel venation.[2]

Like other conifers, they produce cones. Each tree can have both male and female cones (monoecious) or they can have only male or female cones (dioecious).[8]

Male cones are among the largest among all conifer cones, on average. They are cylindrical and drooping, somewhat resembling catkins. They are borne singly on the tips of branches or the axils of leaves. They contain numerous sporophylls arranged in whorls or spirals. Each has four to 20 elongated pollen sacs attached to the lower surface at one end. The pollen grains are round and do not possess wings or air sacs.[2][6][7]

Female cones are also very large. They are spherical to ovoid in shape and borne erect on thick, short shoots at branch tips. The numerous bracts and scales are either fused to each other or separate for half of their lengths.[2][6][7] The scales almost always bear only one seed on its upper surface, in contrast to two in true pines (family Pinaceae).[9] They are very large, among the largest seeds among conifers. They are dispersed by wind, usually using wing-like structures. On maturity, the female cones detach and fall to the ground.[2][6][7] Due to their size, they can cause serious injuries if they hit a person. The cones of the bunya bunya, Araucaria bidwillii, for example, weigh up to 10 kg (22 lb),[10] about the size and weight of a large pineapple. They can drop from heights of 23 m (75 ft).[9]

Classification and genera

Araucariaceae is classified under the order Pinales, class Pinopsida of the division Pinophyta. The division includes all living conifers. Recently however, some authorities treat Araucariaceae as a separate order, Araucariales.[2]

 

Araucariaceae contains three extant genera and about 41 species.[5]

Image Genus Living Species Distribution
  Araucaria Jussieu 19 living species found in New Caledonia (where 13 species are endemic), Norfolk Island, Australia, New Guinea, Argentina, Chile, and Brazil.
  Agathis Salisbury New Zealand, Australia, Vanuatu, New Caledonia, Papua New Guinea, Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Philippines
  Wollemia W.G. Jones, K.D. Hill & J.M. Allen endemic to Australia. It was known only from fossil remains before the discovery of the living species in 1994.

Phylogeny

Below is the phylogeny of the Pinophyta based on cladistic analysis of molecular data. It shows the position of Araucariaceae within the division.[11]

Relationships between living members of Araucariaceae.[12]

Araucariaceae

Molecular evidence supports Araucariaceae and Podocarpaceae having diverged from each other during the late Permian.[13]

Distribution and habitat

Today, 41 species are known, in three genera: Agathis, Araucaria and Wollemia, distributed largely in the Southern Hemisphere.

By far the greatest diversity is in New Caledonia (18 species), with others in Australia, Argentina, New Zealand, Chile, southern Brazil, and Malesia. In Malesia, Agathis extends a short distance into the Northern Hemisphere, reaching 18°N in the Philippines.

Uses

Several species are very popular ornamental trees in gardens in subtropical regions, and some are also very important timber trees, producing wood of high quality. Several have edible seeds similar to pine nuts, and others produce valuable resin and amber. In the forests where they occur, they are usually dominant trees, often the largest species in the forest; the largest is Araucaria hunsteinii, reported to 89 m tall in New Guinea, with several other species reaching 50–65 m tall. A. heterophylla, the Norfolk Island pine, is a well-known landscaping and house plant from this taxon.

Skillful artisans in the Erzurum Province, Turkey, have used fossilized wood of Araucariaceae for centuries to manufacture jewelry and decorative items. It is known as "Oltustone", the name deriving from the town of Oltu, where it is most commonly excavated. Despite the fact that this semiprecious gemstone is classified as “stone”, wood anatomy reveals it was fossilized pieces of trunks of Araucariacea. Oltustone, also called ‘Black Amber’ is unique to Turkey. It is dull and black, but when polished, acquires an attractive black sheen.[14]

Fossil record

Fossils widely believed to belong to Araucariaceae include the form genera Araucarites (various), Agathoxylon and Araucarioxylon (wood), Brachyphyllum (leaves), Araucariacites and Dilwynites (pollen), and Protodammara (cones).

The oldest definitive records of Araucariaceae are from the Early Jurassic, though there are potential earlier Late Triassic records. Early representatives of Araucaria are widespread across both hemispheres by the Middle Jurassic, such as Araucaria mirabilis and Araucaria sphaerocarpa from the Middle Jurassic of Argentina and England respectively.[15] The oldest records of the Wollemia-Agathis lineage from the Cretaceous, including Emwadea microcarpa from the Albian aged Winton Formation of Australia[16] and Wairarapaia mildenhallii from the Albian-Cenomanian of New Zealand.[17][12] The oldest fossils currently confidently assignable to Agathis are those of Agathis immortalis from the Salamanca Formation of Patagonia, which dates to the Paleocene, approximately 64.67–63.49 million years ago. Agathis-like leaves are also known from the slightly older Lefipán Formation of the same region, which date to the very end of the Cretaceous.[18]

See also

References

  1. ^ Poinar, George; Archibald, Bruce; Brown, Alex (1999). "New amber deposit provides evidence of Early Paleogene extinctions, paleoclimates, and past distributions" (PDF). The Canadian Entomologist. 131 (2): 171–177. doi:10.4039/ent131171-2. S2CID 85718312.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g "Araucariaceae". The Gymnosperm Database. Retrieved November 19, 2011.
  3. ^ "Araucariaceae: life history and ecology". University of California Museum of Paleontology. Retrieved November 19, 2011.
  4. ^ "Agathis australis". The Gymnosperm Database. Retrieved November 19, 2011.
  5. ^ a b Fu Liguo; Li Nan; Robert R. Mill (1999). (PDF). Flora of China. 4: 9–10. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 24, 2011. Retrieved 2011-11-19.
  6. ^ a b c d James E. Eckenwalder (2009). Conifers of the world: the complete reference. Timber Press. p. 70. ISBN 978-0-88192-974-4.
  7. ^ a b c d Stuart Max Walters (1986). The European Garden Flora: Pteridophyta, Gymnospermae, Angiospermae. Cambridge University Press. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-521-24859-4.
  8. ^ Gerald Carr. "Araucariaceae". University of Hawaii. Retrieved November 19, 2011.
  9. ^ a b Wayne P. Armstrong. . Wayne's Word, Paloma College. Archived from the original on December 3, 2011. Retrieved November 19, 2011.
  10. ^ "Araucaria biwillii (Bunya pine) description". The Gymnosperm Database. Retrieved 20 January 2023.
  11. ^ Derived from papers by A. Farjon and C. J. Quinn & R. A. Price in the Proceedings of the Fourth International Conifer Conference, Acta Horticulturae 2003; 615
  12. ^ a b Escapa, Ignacio H.; Catalano, Santiago A. (October 2013). "Phylogenetic Analysis of Araucariaceae: Integrating Molecules, Morphology, and Fossils". International Journal of Plant Sciences. 174 (8): 1153–1170. doi:10.1086/672369. hdl:11336/3583. ISSN 1058-5893. S2CID 56238574.
  13. ^ Stull, Gregory W.; Qu, Xiao-Jian; Parins-Fukuchi, Caroline; Yang, Ying-Ying; Yang, Jun-Bo; Yang, Zhi-Yun; Hu, Yi; Ma, Hong; Soltis, Pamela S.; Soltis, Douglas E.; Li, De-Zhu (July 19, 2021). "Gene duplications and phylogenomic conflict underlie major pulses of phenotypic evolution in gymnosperms". Nature Plants. 7 (8): 1015–1025. doi:10.1038/s41477-021-00964-4. ISSN 2055-0278. PMID 34282286. S2CID 236141481.
  14. ^ Kutluk; et al. (2012). "First Report of Araucariaceae wood (Agathoxylon sp.) from the Late Cretaceous of Turkey". IAWA Journal. 33 (3): 319–326. doi:10.1163/22941932-90000097.
  15. ^ Leslie, Andrew B.; Beaulieu, Jeremy; Holman, Garth; Campbell, Christopher S.; Mei, Wenbin; Raubeson, Linda R.; Mathews, Sarah (September 2018). "An overview of extant conifer evolution from the perspective of the fossil record". American Journal of Botany. 105 (9): 1531–1544. doi:10.1002/ajb2.1143. PMID 30157290.
  16. ^ Dettmann, Mary E.; Clifford, H. Trevor; Peters, Mark (June 2012). "Emwadea microcarpa gen. et sp. nov.—anatomically preserved araucarian seed cones from the Winton Formation (late Albian), western Queensland, Australia". Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology. 36 (2): 217–237. doi:10.1080/03115518.2012.622155. ISSN 0311-5518. S2CID 129171237.
  17. ^ Cantrill, David J.; Raine, J. Ian (November 2006). "Wairarapaia mildenhallii gen. et sp. nov., a New Araucarian Cone Related to Wollemia from the Cretaceous (Albian‐Cenomanian) of New Zealand". International Journal of Plant Sciences. 167 (6): 1259–1269. doi:10.1086/507608. ISSN 1058-5893. S2CID 85365035.
  18. ^ Escapa, Ignacio H.; Iglesias, Ari; Wilf, Peter; Catalano, Santiago A.; Caraballo‐Ortiz, Marcos A.; Rubén Cúneo, N. (August 2018). "Agathis trees of Patagonia's Cretaceous‐Paleogene death landscapes and their evolutionary significance". American Journal of Botany. 105 (8): 1345–1368. doi:10.1002/ajb2.1127. ISSN 0002-9122. PMID 30074620. S2CID 51908977.

Further reading

  • Cookson, I. C.; Duigan, S. L. (1951). "Tertiary Araucariaceae from South-eastern Australia, with notes on living species". Australian Journal of Scientific Research Series B (Biological Sciences). 4: 415–449.
  • Kendall, Mabel W (1949). "A Jurassic member of the Araucariaceae". Annals of Botany. New Series. 13 (50): 151–161. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.aob.a083211.
  • Kershaw, Peter; Wagstaff, Barbara (2001). "The Southern Conifer Family Araucariaceae: History, Status, and Value for Paleoenvironmental Reconstruction". Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics. 32: 397–414. doi:10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.32.081501.114059.
  • Krasilov, Valentin A (1978). "Araucariaceae as indicators of climate and paleolatitudes". Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology. 26 (1–4): 113–124. doi:10.1016/0034-6667(78)90008-8.
  • Pye, Matthew G.; Henwood, Murray J.; Gadek, Paul A. (2009). "Differential levels of genetic diversity and divergence among populations of an ancient Australian rainforest conifer, Araucaria cunninghamii". Plant Systematics and Evolution. 277 (3/4): 173–185. doi:10.1007/s00606-008-0120-1. S2CID 21846658.
  • Setoguchi, Hiroaki; et al. (1998). "Phylogenetic relationships within Araucariaceae based on rbcL gene sequences" (PDF). American Journal of Botany. 85 (11): 1507–1516. doi:10.2307/2446478. JSTOR 2446478. PMID 21680310.
  • Stockey, Ruth A (1982). "The Araucariaceae: an evolutionary perspective". Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology. 37 (1–2): 133–154. doi:10.1016/0034-6667(82)90041-0.
  • Stockey, Ruth A (1994). "Mesozoic Araucariaceae: morphology and systematic relationships". Journal of Plant Research. 107 (4): 493–502. doi:10.1007/BF02344070. S2CID 20148157.

araucariaceae, also, known, araucarians, extremely, ancient, family, coniferous, trees, family, achieved, maximum, diversity, during, jurassic, cretaceous, periods, when, distributed, almost, worldwide, most, northern, hemisphere, vanished, cretaceous, paleoge. Araucariaceae also known as araucarians is an extremely ancient family of coniferous trees The family achieved its maximum diversity during the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods when it was distributed almost worldwide Most of the Araucariaceae in the Northern Hemisphere vanished in the Cretaceous Paleogene extinction event and they are now largely confined to the Southern Hemisphere except for a few species of Agathis in Southeast Asia 1 AraucariaceaeTemporal range Early Jurassic Present PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N possible Late Triassic records Araucaria angustifolia at Minas GeraisScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade GymnospermsDivision PinophytaClass PinopsidaOrder AraucarialesFamily AraucariaceaeHenkel amp W HochstetterType genusAraucariaJuss GeneraAgathis Araucaria Wollemia Agathoxylon Araucarioxylon Araucarites Brachyphyllum Emwadea Pagiophyllum Protodammara Wairarapaia Contents 1 Description 2 Classification and genera 3 Phylogeny 4 Distribution and habitat 5 Uses 6 Fossil record 7 See also 8 References 9 Further readingDescription Edit Tane Mahuta Lord of the Forest a massive Agathis australis tree from New Zealand Members of Araucariaceae are typically extremely tall evergreen trees 2 reaching heights of 60 m 200 ft or more 3 They can also grow very large stem diameters a New Zealand kauri tree Agathis australis named Tane Mahuta The Lord of the Forest has been measured at 45 2 m 148 ft tall with a diameter at breast height of 491 cm 16 11 ft Its total wood volume is calculated to be 516 7 m3 18 250 cu ft 4 making it the third largest conifer after Sequoia and Sequoiadendron both from the Cupressaceae subfamily Sequoioideae 2 The trunks are columnar and have relatively large piths with resinous cortices 5 The branching is usually horizontal and tiered arising regularly in whorls of three to seven branches or alternating in widely separated pairs 6 The leaves can be small needle like and curved or they can be large broadly ovate and flattened 7 They are spirally arranged persistent and usually have parallel venation 2 Like other conifers they produce cones Each tree can have both male and female cones monoecious or they can have only male or female cones dioecious 8 Male cones are among the largest among all conifer cones on average They are cylindrical and drooping somewhat resembling catkins They are borne singly on the tips of branches or the axils of leaves They contain numerous sporophylls arranged in whorls or spirals Each has four to 20 elongated pollen sacs attached to the lower surface at one end The pollen grains are round and do not possess wings or air sacs 2 6 7 Female cones are also very large They are spherical to ovoid in shape and borne erect on thick short shoots at branch tips The numerous bracts and scales are either fused to each other or separate for half of their lengths 2 6 7 The scales almost always bear only one seed on its upper surface in contrast to two in true pines family Pinaceae 9 They are very large among the largest seeds among conifers They are dispersed by wind usually using wing like structures On maturity the female cones detach and fall to the ground 2 6 7 Due to their size they can cause serious injuries if they hit a person The cones of the bunya bunya Araucaria bidwillii for example weigh up to 10 kg 22 lb 10 about the size and weight of a large pineapple They can drop from heights of 23 m 75 ft 9 Classification and genera Edit Araucaria heterophylla Agathis robusta Wollemia nobilis Araucariaceae is classified under the order Pinales class Pinopsida of the division Pinophyta The division includes all living conifers Recently however some authorities treat Araucariaceae as a separate order Araucariales 2 Araucariaceae contains three extant genera and about 41 species 5 Image Genus Living Species Distribution Araucaria Jussieu Araucaria angustifolia Parana pine Araucaria araucana monkey puzzle or pehuen Araucaria bidwillii bunya bunya Araucaria hunsteinii klinki Araucaria bernieri Araucaria biramulata Araucaria columnaris Cook pine Araucaria cunninghamii Moreton Bay pine hoop pine Araucaria goroensis Araucaria heterophylla Norfolk Island pine Araucaria humboldtensis Araucaria laubenfelsii Araucaria luxurians Araucaria montana Araucaria muelleri Araucaria nemorosa Araucaria rulei Araucaria schmidii Araucaria scopulorum Araucaria subulata 19 living species found in New Caledonia where 13 species are endemic Norfolk Island Australia New Guinea Argentina Chile and Brazil Agathis Salisbury Agathis atropurpurea black kauri blue kauri Queensland Australia Agathis australis kauri New Zealand kauri North Island New Zealand Agathis borneensis western Malesia Borneo Agathis corbassonii red kauri New Caledonia Agathis dammara syn A alba A celebica A loranthifolia Bindang eastern Malesia Agathis endertii Borneo Agathis flavescens Peninsular Malaysia Agathis kinabaluensis Borneo Agathis labillardieri New Guinea Agathis lanceolata New Caledonia Agathis lenticula Borneo Agathis macrophylla syn A vitiensis Pacific kauri dakua Fiji Vanuatu Solomon Islands Agathis microstachya bull kauri Queensland Australia Agathis montana New Caledonia Agathis moorei white kauri New Caledonia Agathis orbicula Borneo Agathis ovata New Caledonia Agathis philippinensis Philippines Sulawesi Agathis robusta Queensland kauri Queensland Australia New Guinea Agathis silbae Vanuatu Agathis spathulata New Guinea kauri Papua New Guinea Agathis zamunerae Patagonia South America Argentina New Zealand Australia Vanuatu New Caledonia Papua New Guinea Indonesia Malaysia and the Philippines Wollemia W G Jones K D Hill amp J M Allen Wollemia nobilis endemic to Australia It was known only from fossil remains before the discovery of the living species in 1994 Phylogeny EditBelow is the phylogeny of the Pinophyta based on cladistic analysis of molecular data It shows the position of Araucariaceae within the division 11 PinaceaeAraucariaceaePodocarpaceaeSciadopityaceaeCupressaceaeCephalotaxaceaeTaxaceaeRelationships between living members of Araucariaceae 12 Araucariaceae AraucariaWollemiaAgathisMolecular evidence supports Araucariaceae and Podocarpaceae having diverged from each other during the late Permian 13 Distribution and habitat EditToday 41 species are known in three genera Agathis Araucaria and Wollemia distributed largely in the Southern Hemisphere By far the greatest diversity is in New Caledonia 18 species with others in Australia Argentina New Zealand Chile southern Brazil and Malesia In Malesia Agathis extends a short distance into the Northern Hemisphere reaching 18 N in the Philippines Uses EditFurther information Agathis Uses Araucaria Uses and Wollemia Uses Several species are very popular ornamental trees in gardens in subtropical regions and some are also very important timber trees producing wood of high quality Several have edible seeds similar to pine nuts and others produce valuable resin and amber In the forests where they occur they are usually dominant trees often the largest species in the forest the largest is Araucaria hunsteinii reported to 89 m tall in New Guinea with several other species reaching 50 65 m tall A heterophylla the Norfolk Island pine is a well known landscaping and house plant from this taxon Skillful artisans in the Erzurum Province Turkey have used fossilized wood of Araucariaceae for centuries to manufacture jewelry and decorative items It is known as Oltustone the name deriving from the town of Oltu where it is most commonly excavated Despite the fact that this semiprecious gemstone is classified as stone wood anatomy reveals it was fossilized pieces of trunks of Araucariacea Oltustone also called Black Amber is unique to Turkey It is dull and black but when polished acquires an attractive black sheen 14 Fossil record EditFossils widely believed to belong to Araucariaceae include the form genera Araucarites various Agathoxylon and Araucarioxylon wood Brachyphyllum leaves Araucariacites and Dilwynites pollen and Protodammara cones The oldest definitive records of Araucariaceae are from the Early Jurassic though there are potential earlier Late Triassic records Early representatives of Araucaria are widespread across both hemispheres by the Middle Jurassic such as Araucaria mirabilis and Araucaria sphaerocarpa from the Middle Jurassic of Argentina and England respectively 15 The oldest records of the Wollemia Agathis lineage from the Cretaceous including Emwadea microcarpa from the Albian aged Winton Formation of Australia 16 and Wairarapaia mildenhallii from the Albian Cenomanian of New Zealand 17 12 The oldest fossils currently confidently assignable to Agathis are those of Agathis immortalis from the Salamanca Formation of Patagonia which dates to the Paleocene approximately 64 67 63 49 million years ago Agathis like leaves are also known from the slightly older Lefipan Formation of the same region which date to the very end of the Cretaceous 18 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Araucariaceae Wikispecies has information related to Araucariaceae Paleobotany Te Matua NgahereReferences Edit Poinar George Archibald Bruce Brown Alex 1999 New amber deposit provides evidence of Early Paleogene extinctions paleoclimates and past distributions PDF The Canadian Entomologist 131 2 171 177 doi 10 4039 ent131171 2 S2CID 85718312 a b c d e f g Araucariaceae The Gymnosperm Database Retrieved November 19 2011 Araucariaceae life history and ecology University of California Museum of Paleontology Retrieved November 19 2011 Agathis australis The Gymnosperm Database Retrieved November 19 2011 a b Fu Liguo Li Nan Robert R Mill 1999 Araucariaceae PDF Flora of China 4 9 10 Archived from the original PDF on May 24 2011 Retrieved 2011 11 19 a b c d James E Eckenwalder 2009 Conifers of the world the complete reference Timber Press p 70 ISBN 978 0 88192 974 4 a b c d Stuart Max Walters 1986 The European Garden Flora Pteridophyta Gymnospermae Angiospermae Cambridge University Press p 72 ISBN 978 0 521 24859 4 Gerald Carr Araucariaceae University of Hawaii Retrieved November 19 2011 a b Wayne P Armstrong The Araucaria Family Araucariaceae Wayne s Word Paloma College Archived from the original on December 3 2011 Retrieved November 19 2011 Araucaria biwillii Bunya pine description The Gymnosperm Database Retrieved 20 January 2023 Derived from papers by A Farjon and C J Quinn amp R A Price in the Proceedings of the Fourth International Conifer Conference Acta Horticulturae 2003 615 a b Escapa Ignacio H Catalano Santiago A October 2013 Phylogenetic Analysis of Araucariaceae Integrating Molecules Morphology and Fossils International Journal of Plant Sciences 174 8 1153 1170 doi 10 1086 672369 hdl 11336 3583 ISSN 1058 5893 S2CID 56238574 Stull Gregory W Qu Xiao Jian Parins Fukuchi Caroline Yang Ying Ying Yang Jun Bo Yang Zhi Yun Hu Yi Ma Hong Soltis Pamela S Soltis Douglas E Li De Zhu July 19 2021 Gene duplications and phylogenomic conflict underlie major pulses of phenotypic evolution in gymnosperms Nature Plants 7 8 1015 1025 doi 10 1038 s41477 021 00964 4 ISSN 2055 0278 PMID 34282286 S2CID 236141481 Kutluk et al 2012 First Report of Araucariaceae wood Agathoxylon sp from the Late Cretaceous of Turkey IAWA Journal 33 3 319 326 doi 10 1163 22941932 90000097 Leslie Andrew B Beaulieu Jeremy Holman Garth Campbell Christopher S Mei Wenbin Raubeson Linda R Mathews Sarah September 2018 An overview of extant conifer evolution from the perspective of the fossil record American Journal of Botany 105 9 1531 1544 doi 10 1002 ajb2 1143 PMID 30157290 Dettmann Mary E Clifford H Trevor Peters Mark June 2012 Emwadea microcarpa gen et sp nov anatomically preserved araucarian seed cones from the Winton Formation late Albian western Queensland Australia Alcheringa An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology 36 2 217 237 doi 10 1080 03115518 2012 622155 ISSN 0311 5518 S2CID 129171237 Cantrill David J Raine J Ian November 2006 Wairarapaia mildenhallii gen et sp nov a New Araucarian Cone Related to Wollemia from the Cretaceous Albian Cenomanian of New Zealand International Journal of Plant Sciences 167 6 1259 1269 doi 10 1086 507608 ISSN 1058 5893 S2CID 85365035 Escapa Ignacio H Iglesias Ari Wilf Peter Catalano Santiago A Caraballo Ortiz Marcos A Ruben Cuneo N August 2018 Agathis trees of Patagonia s Cretaceous Paleogene death landscapes and their evolutionary significance American Journal of Botany 105 8 1345 1368 doi 10 1002 ajb2 1127 ISSN 0002 9122 PMID 30074620 S2CID 51908977 Further reading EditCookson I C Duigan S L 1951 Tertiary Araucariaceae from South eastern Australia with notes on living species Australian Journal of Scientific Research Series B Biological Sciences 4 415 449 Kendall Mabel W 1949 A Jurassic member of the Araucariaceae Annals of Botany New Series 13 50 151 161 doi 10 1093 oxfordjournals aob a083211 Kershaw Peter Wagstaff Barbara 2001 The Southern Conifer Family Araucariaceae History Status and Value for Paleoenvironmental Reconstruction Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 32 397 414 doi 10 1146 annurev ecolsys 32 081501 114059 Krasilov Valentin A 1978 Araucariaceae as indicators of climate and paleolatitudes Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 26 1 4 113 124 doi 10 1016 0034 6667 78 90008 8 Pye Matthew G Henwood Murray J Gadek Paul A 2009 Differential levels of genetic diversity and divergence among populations of an ancient Australian rainforest conifer Araucaria cunninghamii Plant Systematics and Evolution 277 3 4 173 185 doi 10 1007 s00606 008 0120 1 S2CID 21846658 Setoguchi Hiroaki et al 1998 Phylogenetic relationships within Araucariaceae based on rbcL gene sequences PDF American Journal of Botany 85 11 1507 1516 doi 10 2307 2446478 JSTOR 2446478 PMID 21680310 Stockey Ruth A 1982 The Araucariaceae an evolutionary perspective Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 37 1 2 133 154 doi 10 1016 0034 6667 82 90041 0 Stockey Ruth A 1994 Mesozoic Araucariaceae morphology and systematic relationships Journal of Plant Research 107 4 493 502 doi 10 1007 BF02344070 S2CID 20148157 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Araucariaceae amp oldid 1134697693, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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