Annals of Botany 78: 83-94, 1996
© 1996 Annals of Botany Company
Studies of Fossil and Modern Spore Wall Biomacromolecules using13C Solid State NMR
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Wales, Cardiff, PO Box 914, Cardiff, CF1 3YE, U.K. Department of Geology, Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, Surrey, U.K. Department of Chemistry, University College London, Christopher Ingold Laboratories, 20 Gordon Street, London, WC1H 0AJ, U.K.
September 7, 1995 ; January 22, 1996
A range of Carboniferous lycophyte megaspore exines have been investigated using13C magic-angle spinning nuclear magnetic resonance (MAS NMR) spectroscopy. Their composition differs considerably from sporopollenin obtained from an extant lycophyte. The differences observed result in part from varying degrees of diagenesis.
Fossil fern spores, gymnosperm megaspore-membranes and pollen have also been examined. These show a similar composition to the fossil lycophyte megaspores. The constituent material of all of these exines differs considerably from the sporopollenin obtained from comparable extant samples. Despite the changes in composition observed on fossilisation, differences in composition between the major groups of plants may be preserved to some extent in the fossil material. Walls of the fossil prasinophycean algal cystTasmanites have been examined and these show a greater similarity to fossil cuticle and algaenans than to sporopollenins.
The effect of oxidative maceration on fossil and modern sporopollenins has also been investigated. The main influence of oxidative maceration is the removal of unsaturated carbon environments such as aromatics; this causes fossil spores to be more susceptible to oxidative maceration than the modern exines. Heating of modern exine material models the alteration of exines by diagenesis. The changes that occur on heating an extant sample to 150225°C give a chemical composition that is similar to those of the fossil sporopollenins.
13C solid state NMR; spores; pollen; fossil; Carboniferous lycopsids; ferns; pteridosperm; gymnosperm; oxidative maceration; heating; thermal maturation
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