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Eocene Grass Spikelet Found Preserved in Baltic Amber

Posted: Sun Oct 10, 2021 2:04 pm
by SwordfishMining
Eograminis balticus, a new species of grass found in a piece of 40-50-million-year-old amber, represents the first definite grass to be described from Baltic amber as well as the first fossil member of Arundinoideae, a subfamily of the widespread Poaceae family that includes cereal grasses, bamboos and many species found in lawns and natural grasslands.
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A spikelet is one unit of inflorescence, or flower arrangement, and consists of two glumes and one or more florets.

A glume is a leaflike structure below the flower cluster, and a floret is one of the small flowers in the cluster.

The fossil spikelet examined by Oregon State University’s Professor George Poinar Jr. and Smithsonian Institution’s Dr. Roberg Soreng is the first definite evidence that grasses were among the various plants in the Baltic amber forest.

“The discovery not only adds a new plant group to the extensive flora that have been described from Baltic amber but provides new insights into the forest habitat the amber came from, a controversial topic in this field of study,” said Professor Poinar said.

“Some scientists have proposed that fossiliferous amber from the Baltic region was formed in tropical and subtropical woods, and others say it came from a humid, marshy, warm-temperate forest. Our new grass suggests that for at least a time the habitat was warm-temperate, like you see today in mixed deciduous and conifer forests.”

The amber specimen is between 40 and 50 million years old (Eocene epoch).

It came from the Blue Earth Formation in the Samland Peninsula of the Baltic Sea.

“Present on the spikelet is an immature grasshopper-like insect and a leaf-spot fungal spore that provide information on the microhabitat of the fossil grass,” Professor Poinar said.

“The spikelet has structural and developmental features that existed in early Cenozoic grasses and establishes an important calibration point for future studies on the origin and splitting of genera in its subtribe.”

Because of the lack of access to leaves, pistils, and complete stamens, it is difficult to align Eograminis balticus with any modern genus.
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