A New Fossil Flower of the Genus Vouarana (Sapindaceae) in Amber from the Dominican Republic


  •  George Poinar    

Abstract

Vouarana hispaniolae (Sapindaceae) is described as a new fossil flower in Dominican Republic amber. The flower is functionally staminate and is characterized by an actinomorphic corolla with 5 distinct, imbricate sepals that are ciliate on their margins, and closely appressed to surface of the receptacle; petals presumable 5, two partly visible are rhombic to triangular in shape; stamens 8, outstretched, filaments bearing thick setae at base; anthers square, basifixed, some retuse at apex, dehiscing via longitudinal slits, central pistillode short, setose; extra-nectary disc entire; pollen trigonous, glabrous and smooth. The fossil species differs from the two extant species of Vouarana that range from Costa Rica to northern Brazil by possessing a uniform covering of bristly setae over the entire receptacle, appressed sepals and square basifixed anthers. This specimen represents the first fossil flower of the Sapindaceae from the Neotropics.


This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
  • ISSN(Print): 1927-0461
  • ISSN(Online): 1927-047X
  • Started: 2012
  • Frequency: annual

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