Quercus hiholensis is an extinct species of oak in the Fagaceae genus Quercus. The species is known from Middle Miocene fossils found in Central Washington.

Quercus hiholensis
Temporal range: Middle Miocene
Quercus hiholensis acorn in matrix
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Fagales
Family: Fagaceae
Genus: Quercus
Subgenus: Quercus subg. Quercus
Section: Quercus sect. Quercus
Species:
Q. hiholensis
Binomial name
Quercus hiholensis
Borgart & Pigg

Description edit

Q. hiholensis acorns range in size from 4 by 4.3 millimetres (532 by 532 inch) to 15.3 by 18.8 mm (58 by 34 in) with an umbo on the tip of some nuts, but absent on others. Of the 26 identified Q. hiholensis acorns, only one specimen has a nut emerging from the cupule, while in the others only the perianth and styles, or umbo show. The exteriors of the cupules comprise helically arranged scales that have a papery tip and range up to 2.8 mm (18 in) with the papery tip extending up to 1.4 mm (116 in) further. The cupule has patches of sclereids scattered through it with some of the sclereids that are associated with scale bases organized into white star shaped patches. The fruits have an ovoid to ovoid-conical shape, ranging between 2.7 by 2.6 mm (764 by 13128 in) to 9 by 10.9 mm (2364 by 2764 in) in size. The smaller, less mature fruits show the distinct structuring of styles and perianth. The styles have flared tips and are short, while the perianth has distinct lobes that are closely placed to the styles. As is typical for acorns of section Quercus, the youngest specimens still have the aborted second ovule and dividing septum present near the base of the developing fruit.[1]

History and classification edit

At the time of study, the holotype acorn, specimen UWBM 45-I, and a series of paratype specimens were preserved in the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, while additional examined fossils that were not part of the type series were part of the paleobotanical collections at Arizona State University. The specimens represent a range of preservation conditions, ranging from exposed on weathered surfaces of the chert, totally weathered out of the chert, and as hollow chert casts of the acorns. A total of 42 specimens in chert were studied by paleobotanists Sandra Borgardt and Kathleen Pigg, with their 1999 type description being published in the American Journal of Botany. Borgardt and Pigg chose the specific epithet hiholensis as a reference to the "Hi hole" locality that is the type locality of the species.[1]

Based on the acorn and floral morphology, Borgardt and Pigg placed the species into the oak subgenus Quercus section Quercus, which includes living white oaks. As Q. hiholensis was the first oak to be described from anatomically preserved acorns, they chose to place the fossils into a new species rather than describe them as fossils belonging to the living species, or acorns belonging to an already described fossil species.[1]

Distribution and paleoecology edit

The species was first described from specimens of silicified acorns preserved in chert of the "Yakima Canyon Flora".[1] The chert was recovered from the "Hi hole" site, one of the "county line hole" fossil localities of the "Yakima Canyon Flora" located north of Interstate 82 in Yakima County, Washington.[2] The "Hi hole" site works strata which was thought to be part of the Museum Flow Package within the interbeds of the Sentinel Bluffs Unit of the central Columbia Plateau N2 Grande Ronde Basalt, Columbia River Basalt Group. The Museum Flow Package interbeds, designated the type locality, are dated to the middle Miocene and are approximately 15.6 million years old.[3] Later re-evaluation of the "hi hole" site indicated that the site is included into a basalt flow, rather than part of the interbedded Museum flow package. The evaluation suggested the basalt is part of the Wanapum Basalt and that the fossils are possibly a little younger than formerly reported.[2] Dating reported in 2007 of a related site near Ellensburg, Washington, confirmed that the deposits worked are pockets within the basalt flows, and the 15.6 million-year-old date was accurate.[4]

Borgardt and Pigg noted that a number of the acorns show signs of probable insect damage, with preserved bore tunnels, possible frass, and possible larvae in some acorns. The overall damage is similar to damage by beetles in modern acorns, and the finds in Q. hiholensis suggest an oak/insect relationship extending at least back to the Miocene.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Borgardt, S. J.; Pigg, K. B. (1999). "Anatomical and developmental study of petrified Quercus (Fagaceae) fruits from the Middle Miocene, Yakima Canyon, Washington, USA". American Journal of Botany. 86 (3): 307–325. doi:10.2307/2656753. JSTOR 2656753. PMID 10077494.
  2. ^ a b Pigg, K. B.; Ickert-Bond, S. M.; Wen, J. (2004). "Anatomically preserved Liquidambar (Altingiaceae) from the middle Miocene of Yakima Canyon, Washington state, USA, and its biogeographic implications". American Journal of Botany. 91 (3): 499–509. doi:10.3732/ajb.91.3.499. PMID 21653405.
  3. ^ Pigg, K.B. (2001). "Anatomically preserved Woodwardia virginica (Blechnaceae) and a new Filicalean fern from the Middle Miocene Yakima Canyon Flora of central Washington, USA". American Journal of Botany. 88 (5): 777–787. doi:10.2307/2657030. JSTOR 2657030. PMID 11353703.
  4. ^ Pigg, K. B.; DeVore, M. D.; Benedict, J. C.; Creekmore, R. M. (2014). "Fruits of Melia (Meliaceae, Melioideae) from the Middle Miocene Yakima Canyon Flora of Central Washington State, USA". Paleobotany and Biogeography: A Festschrift for Alan Graham in His 80th Year: 326–337.