Pollen grain morphology of the three modern angiosperms on King George Island, South Shetland Islands, Antarctic Peninsula

During the Mesozoic and Paleogene period the northern areas of the Antarctic Peninsula were covered by diversified vegetation that included many groups of ferns and conifers. From the Cretaceous period onwards there were also angiosperms. The fall of global temperatures since the beginning of Paleog...

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Veröffentlicht in:GAEA (São Leopoldo, Brazil) Brazil), 2008-01, Vol.4 (1), p.24
Hauptverfasser: Patrícia Nunes Gonçalves, Paulo César Pereira das Neves, Tonin, Aline, Antônio Batista Pereira
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Sprache:por
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Zusammenfassung:During the Mesozoic and Paleogene period the northern areas of the Antarctic Peninsula were covered by diversified vegetation that included many groups of ferns and conifers. From the Cretaceous period onwards there were also angiosperms. The fall of global temperatures since the beginning of Paleogene and the gradual isolation of the continent from other southern land masses, resulted in near extinction of this vegetation and the definitive covering of the continent by ice. This work aims to present the morphology and ultrastructure of the pollen grains from the few groups of herbaceous angiosperms that today live on King George Island, in the South Shetland Islands, where are accompanied by mosses and lichens. They are represented by one Caryophyllaceae, Colobanthus quitensis (Kunth) Bartl., and two Poaceae, Deschampsia antarctica Desv. and Poa annua L. These species were registered in peat bogs dated from 4090 + 90 years B.P. and are here considered as native and relict forms. The presence of P.annua probably represents the effect of human activities in the continent or could result from animal induced dispersion by long distances. The morphologic pattern of the pollen grains is pantoporate, echinous, in C. quitensis, and porate, psilate to moderate scabrate, in D. antarctica and P. annua.
ISSN:1808-5261
1983-3628