The sixteen peer-reviewed contributions of this volume were presented
at a 3-day symposium at the Florida Museum of Natural History,
Gainesville in 2006 and honour two landmark contributors to North
American angiosperm paleobotany born in the morning of July 10, 1936:
David L. Dilcher and Jack Wolfe.
Two introductory papers review the
works of David L. Dilcher and Jack Wolfe, along with bibliographies of
their research publications. The second part consists of selected
peer-reviewed research papers highlighting recent advances in
Cretaceous and Cenozoic paleobotany and the paleobotanical inferences
of past vegetation and climate. In the 1970s Dilcher, Wolfe, Hickey,
and others called attention to the lack of rigor in the identification
of angiosperm leaves by traditional approaches. They appealed for more
critical comparative analyses of extant leaves with efforts to
determine diagnostic features suitable to distinguish taxonomic
groups. To this end, Wolfe began assembling a collection of cleared
angiosperm leaves that could be examined by transmitted light to
reveal venation patterns comparable to those preserved in fossil
leaves, ultimately the world's largest collection of cleared leaves,
now housed in the Department of Paleobiology at the Smithsonian
Institution. A landmark paper (Wolfe & Hickey, 1975), documented the
distribution of leaf characters in relation to the Cronquist and
Takhtajan systems of angiosperm classification. Here, James Doyle
reexamines their approach, updating this seminal work with current
concepts of angiosperm phylogeny derived from molecular data.
At the same time, David Dilcher was emphasizing the importance of leaf
epidermal characters as revealed by cuticular analyses of fossil and
extant leaves. Characteristics of stomatal complexes, trichomes, and
other epidermal structures could be used to confirm or refute
identifications based only on leaf form and venation. Thousands of
prepared slides of macerations of fossil and extant leaf cuticles were
made in assemblyline fashion for many years in the Dilcher lab,
providing steady work for undergraduate and graduate students and
resulting in the largest North American reference collection of
epidermal anatomy.
In this volume, Barclay et al. review the importance of cuticles for
taxonomic and paleoenvironmental investigations, and introduce a new
web-accessible database of images of specimens from the Dilcher
cuticle collections. Jack Wolfe was among the first paleobotanists to
accept the concept of a bolide impact as the defining event of the
Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary. Wolfe and Upchurch (1986, 1987) focused
their attention on paleobotanical change across the
Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary and the floristic consequences of this
event.
Upchurch, Lomax and Beerling provide a synthesis of the research that
has been done since then, dealing with the responses of plants to the
Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary event and questions about the nature and
rapidity of climatic change. Although much of the work on Late
Cretaceous floras over the years has focused on North America, Sun et
al. here present an overview of Late Cretaceous plant megafossil
assemblages from Northeastern China and an interpretation of their
paleoenvironmental signficance.
Pigg and DeVore compare and contrast the research programs of David
Dilcher, who grew up in the Midwestern United States, and Jack Wolfe,
who grew up in the Pacific Northwest, with special attention to
research on Eocene floras. Dilcher and Wolfe both recognized the
relationships between fossil plants and paleoclimate, although they
had different views about how best to interpret the data.
In successive articles Greenwood and Spicer review the development and
recent advances in the methodology used to infer climate from fossil
angiosperm leaves. Jack Wolfe was also interested in tectonic uplift
and the application of fossil plants in determining paleoaltitude. At
the time of his death he was active in a project investigating the
timing of uplift of the Sierra Nevada Mountains. In this volume,
Cecil, Chase & Wolfe examine the sedimentological settings associated
with floras such as Chalk Bluffs and LaPorte in California, providing
evidence of considerable relief in the Northern Sierra Nevada
Mountains at Eocene times. This challenges the view that the Eocene
Sierra Nevada landscape was characterized by low elevation, low relief
features formed by broad, low-gradient river systems prior to Neogene
uplift. The succession of floras in Pacific northwestern North
America provides excellent opportunity to examine floristic and
climatic change through time. Wolfe devoted much interest to the
assessment of vegetational and climatic change from these floras, and
was quick to place the floras in a temporal framework based on
biostratigraphic correlation and radiometric dates on adjacent
volcanic units. In this volume, Leopold, Reinink-Smith and Liu provide
an overview and update on many of the Alaskan Tertiary floras studied
previously by Wolfe. The paper by Schorn, Myers, and Erwin provides an
updated chronology of mid-latitude Neogene floras of the western
United States. The interdisciplinary nature of these studies is
exemplified by the approach of Grawe-DeSantis and MacFadden, who apply
morphological and isotopic investigations of tapirs to the
interpretation of vegetational change from the Early Eocene to the
Recent. Christophel and Gordon investigate leaf litter across
elevational gradients in modern tropical rainforest vegetation of
Queensland, Australia, to provide insights into taphonomic biases that
must be taken into consideration when inferring climatic signal from
the foliar physiognomy of fossil leaf assemblages. Grote provides an
overview of the paleobotanical literature on the Cenozoic of Thailand
and describes a newly discovered Pleistocene fruit and seed assemblage
from northeastern Thailand. The concluding article (Wagner, Visscher,
Kürschner, and Dilcher) demonstrates a tight correlation between
stomatal density and CO
2 in an extant species of Osmunda,based on
cuticular analyses of subfossil leaf material from young peat deposits
in Florida. They use the inverse correlation between stomatal index
and historical CO
2 levels to develop a model with which to infer
paleo-CO
2 levels from leaves of this fern genus over much longer
periods of geologic time.