Well-preserved specimens of Kepingophyllum aksuence Wu et Chow were collected from Early Permian strata in western Tarim Basin, Xinjiang. More than 100 serial thin sections were made for this study. Kepingophyllum aks...Well-preserved specimens of Kepingophyllum aksuence Wu et Chow were collected from Early Permian strata in western Tarim Basin, Xinjiang. More than 100 serial thin sections were made for this study. Kepingophyllum aksuence displays a unique increase pattern. The bud appears in lonsdaleoid dissepiments between the corallites where the wall of parent corallite disappears and the area becomes aphroid. This increase pattern is different from other lateral increases of most colonial rngose corals, and therefore has taxonomic significance to differentiate Kepingophyllidae from other compound rugose corals. It is also discussed that Kepingophyllum aksuence has a high "reproductive integration", which means a rapid growth of buds during the offsetting process. Kepingophyllum was possibly originated from Ivanovia and was also a probable ancestor of Wentzellophyllum, which is supported here by more or less the similarity of the blastogeny in different stages of three taxa.展开更多
The process in which a colony is developed from protocorallite by asexual reproduction that made the majority of compound coral skeleton is called 'increase pattern' . Different taxa and even different colonie...The process in which a colony is developed from protocorallite by asexual reproduction that made the majority of compound coral skeleton is called 'increase pattern' . Different taxa and even different colonies of the same taxon could exhibit different increase patterns.展开更多
基金supported by the Chinese Academy of Sciences (KZCX2-YW-122, KZCX2-YW-Q050603)the Ministry of Science and Technology of China (2006FY120300-8)+1 种基金National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC)the CAS/SAFEA International Partnership Program for Creative Research Teams
文摘Well-preserved specimens of Kepingophyllum aksuence Wu et Chow were collected from Early Permian strata in western Tarim Basin, Xinjiang. More than 100 serial thin sections were made for this study. Kepingophyllum aksuence displays a unique increase pattern. The bud appears in lonsdaleoid dissepiments between the corallites where the wall of parent corallite disappears and the area becomes aphroid. This increase pattern is different from other lateral increases of most colonial rngose corals, and therefore has taxonomic significance to differentiate Kepingophyllidae from other compound rugose corals. It is also discussed that Kepingophyllum aksuence has a high "reproductive integration", which means a rapid growth of buds during the offsetting process. Kepingophyllum was possibly originated from Ivanovia and was also a probable ancestor of Wentzellophyllum, which is supported here by more or less the similarity of the blastogeny in different stages of three taxa.
文摘The process in which a colony is developed from protocorallite by asexual reproduction that made the majority of compound coral skeleton is called 'increase pattern' . Different taxa and even different colonies of the same taxon could exhibit different increase patterns.