Publication | Open Access
Fossilized Nuclei and Chromosomes Reveal 180 Million Years of Genomic Stasis in Royal Ferns
148
Citations
30
References
2014
Year
BiologyPhylogeneticsBotanyRoyal FernGenome SizeGeneticsEvolutionary BiologyHydrothermal BrinesNatural SciencesLiving FossilMolecular PalaeobiologyLiving MaterialsBiostratigraphyChromosomes Reveal 180PaleobotanyMillion YearsRoyal Ferns
Rapidly permineralized fossils can provide exceptional insights into the evolution of life over geological time. Here, we present an exquisitely preserved, calcified stem of a royal fern (Osmundaceae) from Early Jurassic lahar deposits of Sweden in which authigenic mineral precipitation from hydrothermal brines occurred so rapidly that it preserved cytoplasm, cytosol granules, nuclei, and even chromosomes in various stages of cell division. Morphometric parameters of interphase nuclei match those of extant Osmundaceae, indicating that the genome size of these reputed "living fossils" has remained unchanged over at least 180 million years-a paramount example of evolutionary stasis.
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