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      Leaf energy balance modelling as a tool to infer habitat preference in the early angiosperms

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          Abstract

          Despite more than a century of research, some key aspects of habitat preference and ecology of the earliest angiosperms remain poorly constrained. Proposed growth ecology has varied from opportunistic weedy species growing in full sun to slow-growing species limited to the shaded understorey of gymnosperm forests. Evidence suggests that the earliest angiosperms possessed low transpiration rates: gas exchange rates for extant basal angiosperms are low, as are the reconstructed gas exchange rates for the oldest known angiosperm leaf fossils. Leaves with low transpirational capacity are vulnerable to overheating in full sun, favouring the hypothesis that early angiosperms were limited to the shaded understorey. Here, modelled leaf temperatures are used to examine the thermal tolerance of some of the earliest angiosperms. Our results indicate that small leaf size could have mitigated the low transpirational cooling capacity of many early angiosperms, enabling many species to survive in full sun. We propose that during the earliest phases of the angiosperm leaf record, angiosperms may not have been limited to the understorey, and that some species were able to compete with ferns and gymnosperms in both shaded and sunny habitats, especially in the absence of competition from more rapidly growing and transpiring advanced lineages of angiosperms.

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          Archaefructaceae, a new basal angiosperm family.

          Archaefructaceae is proposed as a new basal angiosperm family of herbaceous aquatic plants. This family consists of the fossils Archaefructus liaoningensis and A. sinensis sp. nov. Complete plants from roots to fertile shoots are known. Their age is a minimum of 124.6 million years from the Yixian Formation, Liaoning, China. They are a sister clade to all angiosperms when their characters are included in a combined three-gene molecular and morphological analysis. Their reproductive axes lack petals and sepals and bear stamens in pairs below conduplicate carpels.
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            Archaefructus--angiosperm precursor or specialized early angiosperm?

            With molecular analyses indicating that angiosperms are not closely related to any other extant seed plant group, information from fossils might provide the only basis for reconstructing their origin. Therefore the description of a new Early Cretaceous angiosperm, Archaefructus, placed as the sister of all extant angiosperms, has created much debate and optimism. However, we question both the interpretation and the analysis of Archaefructus, concluding that it might be a crown-group angiosperm specialized for aquatic habit rather than a more primitive relative.
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              Author and article information

              Journal
              Proc Biol Sci
              Proc. Biol. Sci
              RSPB
              royprsb
              Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
              The Royal Society
              0962-8452
              1471-2954
              22 March 2015
              22 March 2015
              : 282
              : 1803
              : 20143052
              Affiliations
              [1 ]The School of Biosciences, University of Nottingham , Sutton Bonington Campus, Sutton Bonington, Leicestershire LE12 5RD, UK
              [2 ]Department of Biology, Texas State University , 601 University Drive, San Marcos, TX 78666, USA
              Author notes
              Author information
              http://orcid.org/0000-0003-4147-2007
              Article
              rspb20143052
              10.1098/rspb.2014.3052
              4345464
              25694625
              dccd58fd-d7e3-4336-8cda-420dc7b24986

              © 2015 The Authors. Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.

              History
              : 16 December 2014
              : 19 January 2015
              Categories
              1001
              144
              70
              60
              Research Articles
              Custom metadata
              March 22, 2015

              Life sciences
              basal angiosperms,evolution,modelling,leaf size,thermal tolerance,ancestral ecology
              Life sciences
              basal angiosperms, evolution, modelling, leaf size, thermal tolerance, ancestral ecology

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