PaleogeneFicusleaves from India and their implications for fig evolution and diversification

Author:

Chandra Kajal12,Spicer R. A.34,Shukla Anumeha1ORCID,Spicer Teresa3,Mehrotra R. C.1,Singh Amit Kumar2

Affiliation:

1. Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences 53 University Road Lucknow India

2. Department of Botany University of Lucknow Lucknow Uttar Pradesh 226007 India

3. CAS Key Laboratory of Tropical Forest Ecology, Xishuangbanna Tropical Botanical Garden Chinese Academy of Sciences Mengla 666303 China

4. School of Environment, Earth and Ecosystem Sciences The Open University Milton Keynes MK7 6AA UK

Abstract

AbstractPremiseFicusis a scientifically and economically important genus with abundant fossil records from the Paleocene to Pleistocene, but with an intriguing early evolutionary history that remains unresolved. Here, the foliage of three well‐preserved figs is described from the early Paleogene succession of the Gurha mine, Rajasthan, India. These fossils provide new morphological data that strengthens our understanding of the past occurrences ofFicusand, alongside all validly published records of fossil figs, helps to trace the evolutionary history of figs.MethodsFossils were identified and described by comparison with their closest modern analogs using the Nearest Living Relative (NLR) technique. Validated fig records are listed and categorized into six geological time frames. Modern precipitation data for the current distributions of NLRs were downloaded from the Climatic Research Unit Timeseries.ResultsFossil leaves assigned to three new speciesFicus paleodicranostyla,F. paleovariegata, andF. paleoauriculataclosely resemble their modern analogs based on leaf morphology. Reliable fossil records were used to hypothesize historical fig distributions and paleodispersal pathways. Precipitation data suggest higher precipitations at the fossil locality during the early Paleogene than at present.ConclusionsThe fossils described herein supplement fig fossil records known from other regions indicating that figs were widely diverse across low latitudes by the early Paleogene. These data support a Eurasian origin for figs, highlight a pivotal role for the Indian subcontinent during the early phase of fig diversification, and depict a perhumid‐to‐humid climate with high rainfall concordant with paleoclimate evidence from the Gurha mine.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference106 articles.

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3.

First fossil record of a nymph (Ephemeroptera, Teloganellidae) from the Indian subcontinent

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5. New Precise Dating of the India‐Asia Collision in the Tibetan Himalaya at 61 Ma

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