Puneet Varma (Editor)

Lepidopteris callipteroides

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Kingdom
  
Species
  
L. callipteroides

Genus
  
Family
  
†Peltaspermaceae

Phylum
  
†Pteridospermophyta

Lepidopteris callipteroides httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Lepidopteris, Dicroidium, Pteridospermatophyta, Glossopteris

Lepidopteris callipteroides is a form species for leaves of Late Permian Pteridospermophyta, or seed ferns, which lived from around 252 million years ago in what is now Australia, and Madagascar. Lepidopteris callipteroides was an immediate survivor of the largest Permian-Triassic extinction event, migrating southward with the post-apocalyptic greenhouse spike

Contents

Description

In the form generic system of paleobotany Lepidopteris is used only for leaves, which in Lepidopteris callipteroides is palmate with multiple dichotomies of the rachis. The cuticle of the leaves is thick and has distinctive cuticular structure with stomatal opening overhung by papillae, used to link the fossil leaves with well preserved ovulate structures of Peltaspermum townrovii and pollen organs of Permotheca helbyi in the same deposits

Atmospheric carbon dioxide paleobarometer

The cuticular structure of Lepidopteris callipteroides is comparable to that of modern Ginkgo, and has been used to estimate past atmospheric carbon dioxide of an astounding 7832 ppm from its stomatal index immediately following the largest Permian-Triassic extinction event.

References

Lepidopteris callipteroides Wikipedia


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