Hsua

<i>Hsua</i>

Hsua

Extinct genus of vascular plants


Quick Facts Scientific classification, Type species ...

Hsua is a genus of extinct vascular plants, known from the Devonian. The name of the genus honours the Chinese palaeobotanist, Jen Hsü (徐仁[2]).

Features

The main stems (axes) of Hsua robusta are about an inch thick, with circinate, pseudo-monopodial side branches emerging from the sides. The small side branches emerge immediately above a dichotomous branching point of the main axis. The lateral branches are in a plane (planar). In the centre of the axes is a protostele with an elliptical cross-section. The protoxylem was probably inside the xylem, maturing from the inside out.[clarification needed] The tracheids have annular secondary wall thickening.

Round- to kidney-shaped sporangia lie on dichotomous branches at the end of the lateral branches, and open with symmetrical valves.

The trilete spores are 18 to 36 µm in size.

The gametophyte is unknown.

In Hsua deflexa, the main axis was creeping with the lateral axes at right angles from it. The axes had thorny spikes.[1]

Preservation

Hsua robusta is very well preserved in cherts and as compression fossils in the Xujiachong Formation, Yunnan, China. Hsua deflexa comes from the same formation,[1] which is Early Devonian (~Pragian to Emsian, around 410 to 390 million years ago).

Taxonomy

The terminal sporangia of Hsua robusta placed it in the traditional family Cooksoniaceae (order Rhyniales). Kenrick and Crane, based on a cladistic analysis, placed it in its own family, Hsuaceae, in the order Sawdoniales, based on spore characteristics.[3] Hao and Xue in 2013 regarded Hsua as a "renalioid", part of the Rhyniopsida.[4]

Further reading

  • Taylor, T. N.; Taylor, E. L. (1993). The Biology and Evolution of Fossil Plants. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-651589-4.

References

  1. Wang, De-Ming; Hao, Shou-Gang & Wang, Qi (2003), "Hsua deflexa sp. nov. from the Xujiachong Formation (Lower Devonian) of eastern Yunnan, China", Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 142 (3): 255–271, doi:10.1046/j.1095-8339.2003.00187.x
  2. Kenrick, Paul & Crane, Peter R. (1997), The Origin and Early Diversification of Land Plants: A Cladistic Study, Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, ISBN 978-1-56098-730-7

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