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Original Articles

Fossil fruits of Canarium (Burseraceae) from Eastern Asia and their implications for phytogeographical history

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Pages 841-852 | Received 04 Jan 2017, Accepted 20 Jun 2017, Published online: 02 Aug 2017
 

Abstract

The genus Canarium contains approximately 78 species distributed in the Old World tropics and subtropics. Canarium is characterized by a distinctive drupaceous fruit with a trilocular endocarp derived from three fused pyrenes. Here, we describe new Canarium fossil fruits from the late Oligocene of the Yongning Formation, the Miocene of the Erzitang Formation, and the late Miocene of the Foluo Formation in Guangxi Province, South China, providing the first confirmed fossil occurrences of Canarium in eastern Asia. The fruits of Canarium guangxiensis Han & Manchester sp. nov. are ovoidal to spindle shaped, 22.8–34.3 mm long, and 10.7–14.6 mm wide. Computed tomography (CT) scan was used to study the morphological and anatomical characters of fossil and modern Canarium, facilitating identification of the fossil fruits. This new occurrence supplements other megafossil records of Canarium fruits from the Eocene in North America, the Eocene to Oligocene in Europe, the Oligocene in Africa, the Oligocene to Miocene in Asia and from the Pleistocene in Australia and the Pacific islands. The fossil record indicates a wide dispersal of Canarium over the Northern Hemisphere during the Eocene and Oligocene, followed by a geographical contraction during the Miocene as the result of its extinction from North America and Europe. The origin and migratory routes of this genus are not clearly resolved, but based on the fossils known so far, we hypothesize that Canarium may have had a North American Eocene origin, with subsequent spread to Eurasia and Africa, followed by dispersal to the Southern Hemisphere.

Acknowledgements

This study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant numbers 41372002, 41210001 and 41528201), the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (grant number 16lgjc28), the Scientific Research Fund, Hongda Zhang, Sun Yat-sen University, and the State Scholarship Fund of China Scholarship Council (CSC; file number 201606380086). We thank the researchers at the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, for CT scanning and allowing us to use their software to analyse the scan data. We also thank Behnaz Balmaki (University of Nevada, Reno) for helping us to process some of the scan results. We are grateful to the staff at the Sun Yat-sen University Herbarium and the Herbarium of the South China Botanical Garden (IBSC), Chinese Academy of Sciences for permission to examine and photograph extant Burseraceae specimens. We also express sincere gratitude to the graduate students majoring in Botany at Sun Yat-sen University who participated in the field collections of the fossils. The manuscript was improved with the help of review comments from Bruce Tiffney and Edoardo Martinetto.

Supplemental material

Supplemental material for this article can be accessed at: https://doi.org/10.1080/14772019.2017.1349624.

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