Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-mp689 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-15T14:44:38.910Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Palaeobotany of the Bunya Pine

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 February 2016

Get access

Extract

The bunya pine (Araucaria bidwillii Hook) is one of the most interesting species of the family Araucariaceae, a typical Southern Hemisphere conifer (Table 1) family that includes three living genera: Araucaria de Jussieu, Agathis Salisbury and the recently described genus Wollemia Jones, Hill and Allen. Araucaria bidwillii is traditionally classified in the Section Bunya of genus Araucaria. In addition to the section Bunya, there are three more sections in the genus Araucaria: Eutacta Endlicher and Intermedia White from Australasia, and Araucaria (=Columbea) Wilde and Eames from South America.

Type
Special Issue: On The Bunya Trail
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Notes

1 Stockey, R. A., ‘Anatomy and morphology of Araucaria sphaerocarpa Carruthers from the Jurassic Inferior Oolite of Bruton, Somerset’, Botanical Gazette 141 (1980a), 116124; R. A. Stockey, ‘The Araucariaceae and evolutionary perspective’, Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 37 (1982): 133–154; R. A. Stockey, H. Nishida & M. Nishida, ‘Upper Cretaceous araucarian cones from Hokkaido and Saghalien: Araucaria nipponensis sp. nov.’, International Journal of Plant Sciences 155 (1994): 800–809.Google Scholar

3 Stockey, R. A., ‘Seeds and embryos of Araucaria mirabilis’, American Journal of Botany 62 (1975): 856868; R. A. Stockey, ‘Reproductive biology of the Cerro Cuadrado fossil conifers: Ontogeny and reproductive strategies in Araucaria mirabilis (Spegazzini) Windhausen’, Palaeontographica B 166 (1978): 1–15; Stockey 1982, op.cit., 133–154; R. A. Stockey and T. N. Taylor, ‘On the structure and evolutionary relationships of the Cerro Cuadrado fossil conifer seedlings’, Journal of the Linnean Society London (Bot.) 76 (1978): 161–176.Google Scholar

4 Information provided by Ian Smith from A. P. Kershaw, ‘Evidence for vegetation and climatic change in the Quaternary’ in The geology and geophysics of Northeastern Australia, eds. Henderson, R. A. Stephenson, P. J., (Queensland: Geological Society of Australia, 1980), 399402; R. S. Hill, Pers. Comm., Hobart: University of Tasmania, 1999.Google Scholar

5 Stockey 1980a, op.cit.Google Scholar

6 Stockey 1975, op.cit., 1978, op.cit., 1982, op.cit.; Stockey and Taylor 1978, op.cit. Google Scholar

7 Stockey, R. A., ‘Reproductive biology of the Cerro Cuadrado (Jurassic) conifers: Pararaucaria patagonica’, American Journal of Botany 64 (1977): 733744.Google Scholar

8 Stockey 1978, op.cit.Google Scholar

9 Stockey, R. A., ‘Araucaria: the fossil record’, IDS International Araucariaceae Symposium, Auckland, New Zealand, (2002): 910.Google Scholar

10 Stockey 1982, op.cit; Stockey, R. A., ‘Mesozoic Araucariaceae: morphology and systematic relationships’, Journal of Plant Research 107 (1994): 493502.Google Scholar

11 Vishnu-Mittre, , ‘Araucarites bindrabunensis sp. nov., a petrified megastrobilus from the Jurassic of Rajmahal Hills, Bihar’, Palaeobotanist 3 (1954): 103108.Google Scholar

12 Stockey 1994, op.cit.Google Scholar

13 Brown, J. T., ‘On Araucaria rogersii Seward from the Lower Cretaceous Kirkwood Formation of the Algoa Basin, Cape Province, South Africa’, Palaeontologia Africana 20 (1977): 4751.Google Scholar

14 Bose, M. N., ‘Araucaria haastii Ettingshausen from Shag Point, New Zealand’, Palaeobotanist 22 (1975): 7680.Google Scholar

15 Stockey, R. A., ‘Jurassic araucarian cone from Southern England’, Palaeontology 23 (1980b), 657666.Google Scholar

16 Stockey, R. A, Nishida, H., Nishida, H. and M., ‘Upper Cretaceous araucarian cones from Hokkaido: Araucaria nihongii sp. nov.’, Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 72 (1992): 2740.Google Scholar

17 Stockey, et al. 1994, op.cit.Google Scholar