4. Systematic Paleontology
Equisetales
Calamitaceae
Palaeostachya Weiss 1876
Type species: Palaeostachys elongata (Presl) Weiss 1876
Palaeostachya ettingshausenii Kidston 1903
Material: The specimens are from the S. Opluštil’s collection and are as follows: Nos. 935 and 1451 are from the Tuchlovice Mine, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Czech Republic, Bashkirian (Upper Duckmantian); E2414, E3624, E3626, E2412, and E3623 are from the Mayray Mine, Kladno; E3618 is from the Max Mine, Kladno; E3635 is from the Ronna Mine, Kladno; and E3596 is from the Břasy locality. All are from the Kladno-Rakovník Basin. The following specimens are from the Intra-Sudetic Basin as follows: E3622 is from the Maria-Julia Mine near Třemošín, Kasimovian (Stephanian); and E2500 is from the Žacléř locality, with an unknown stratigraphic position.
A description of the in situ spores is as follows: The trilete spores are circular, subtriangular, or oval in amb. Two kinds of spores probably represent the microspores (
Figure 2d–i,k,l,
Figure 3c–f, and
Figure 4c,d,f–i) and megaspores (
Figure 2b,c,
Figure 3b, and
Figure 4a,b). The laevigate exine of the microspores is up to 4 µm thick, and that of the megaspores is 6–9 µm thick. The rays of the trilete mark reach a third to two-thirds of the radius. Secondary folds of the exine possess variable sizes, shapes, positions, and numbers. Three size categories of the in situ spores were recognized (
Table 2): the first with a size range of 44 (71) 171 µm (the majority of specimens), and the second is 80 (139) 181 µm; the megaspores are 234 (448) 708 µm. The contact area is sometimes developed. The in situ microspores can be compared to the dispersed miospore species
Calamospora microrugosa (Ibrahim) Schopf et al.,
C. cf.
microrugosa,
C. pedata Kosanke,
C. cf.
pedata,
C. pallida (Loose) Schopf et al.,
C. cf.
pallida,
C. cf.
liquida,
C. breviradiata Kosanke, and
C. hartungiana Schopf et al., and the megaspores to the species
C. perrugosa (Loose) Schopf et al.
Palaeostachya distachya (Sternberg) Jongmans 1911
Material: E3608, E3598, and E3604 are from Hnidousy, near Kladno; and E1132, E3599, E3603, E1132, and E1134 are from the Ronna Mine. All of them are from the Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Bashkirian-Moscovian (Upper Duckmantian/Lower Bolsovian).
A description of the in situ spores is as follows: The trilete spores are circular, subtriangular, or oval in amb. The laevigate exine of the microspores is up to 3 µm thick. The rays of the trilete mark reach a third to two-thirds of the radius. Secondary folds of the exine possess variable sizes, shapes, positions, and numbers. The size range is 34 (65) 119 µm (
Table 3). The contact area (
Figure 5b–d) and labrum (
Figure 5f,j,l and
Figure 6d,e) are sometimes developed. The in situ microspores can be compared to the dispersed miospore species
Calamospora mutabilis (Loose) Schopf et al.,
C. cf.
pedata,
C. minuta Bharadwaj,
C. cf.
minuta,
C. hartungiana,
C. cf.
hartungiana,
C. breviradiata,
C. cf.
breviradiata, and
C saariana Bharadwaj.
Palaeostachya pedunculata Williamson 1874
Material: No. E1125, from the Ronna Mine near Kladno, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Bashkirian (Upper Duckmantian).
A description of the in situ spores is as follows: The trilete spores are circular, subtriangular, or oval in amb. The laevigate exine of the microspores is up to 2 µm thick. The rays of the trilete mark reach half of the radius. Secondary folds of the exine possess variable sizes, shapes, positions, and numbers (
Figure 6g–k). The size range is 51 (70) 89 µm. The labrum is sometimes developed (
Figure 6g,i). The in situ microspores can be compared to the dispersed miospore species
Calamospora cf.
pedata,
C. cf.
microrugosa, and
C. cf.
straminea.Palaeostachya elongata (Presl) Weiss 1976
Material: No. E1122 is from Bashkirian (Upper Duckmantian), Kladno locality, Kladno-Rakovník Basin; No. E1121 is from Moscovian (Bolsovian), Rakovník locality, Kladno-Rakovník Basin; Nos. E3607 and E 3616 are from Moscovian (Bolsovian), the Šamotka locality, Věnec Coal Seam near Lubná; No. E3631 is from Bashkirian (Langsettian-Duckmantian) of the Intra-Sudetic Basin, Maria-Julia Mine near Žacléř.
A description of the in situ spores is as follows: The trilete spores are circular, subtriangular, or oval in amb. The laevigate exine of the microspores is up to 2 µm thick. The rays of the trilete mark reach a third to two-thirds of the radius. Secondary folds of the exine possess variable sizes, shapes, positions, and numbers (
Figure 7b–d,j–o). The size range is 60 (112) 141 µm (
Table 4). The contact area and labrum are up to 6 µm in size and sometimes developed (
Figure 7c,h,j,l,n,o). Sometimes, fragments of the perispore can occur on the surface of the exine (
Figure 7d). The in situ microspores can be compared to the dispersed miospore species
Calamospora hartungiana,
C. cf.
hartungiana,
C. falkenbergensis Venkatachala & Bharadwaj, and
C. mutabilis. It is possible that some spores that are classified as
Calamospora falkenbergensis,
C. cf.
hartungiana, and
C. mutabilis, with size ranges of 82 to 152 µm, may be megaspores.
Figure 8 shows the bimodal distribution of the in situ spores isolated from
Palaeostachya elongata.
Palaeostachya gracillima Weiss 1876
Material: No. E1119 is from the Kladno locality, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Bolsovian), and No. E1127 is from the Příčina-Na Brantech locality near Lubná, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Bolsovian).
A description of the in situ spores is as follows: Trilete spores are circular, subtriangular, or oval in amb. The laevigate exine of the microspores is up to 2 µm thick. The rays of the trilete mark reach a third to two-thirds of the radius. Secondary folds of the exine possess variable sizes, shapes, positions, and numbers (
Figure 7q–v). The size range is 34 (65) 95 µm (
Table 5). The labrum is 2–4 µm broad and is sometimes developed (
Figure 7v). The in situ microspores can be compared to the dispersed miospore species
Calamospora braviradiata,
C. minuta,
C. cf.
pedata, and
C. cf.
microrugosa.Palaeostachya feistmantelii Němejc 1953
Material: Nos. E3492 and E3493 are from the Štilec locality near Žebrák, Kladno, Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Bolsovian).
A description of the in situ spores is as follows: The trilete are subcircular microspores. The size range is 55 (69) 108 µm. The laevigate exine is up to 2 µm thick. The labrum is 2–4 µm in size (
Figure 9b,e). Rays of the trilete mark reach a third to two-thirds of the radius. The microspores are poorly preserved and only as fragments and incomplete specimens (
Figure 9c,d,f), probably due to oxidation of the rock. This is the reason why in situ spores can be only described as the
Calamospora type.
Macrostachya carinata (Germar) Zeiller 1879
Material: Collection of S. Opluštil, No. 861 from the Slaný Mine, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian. No. E3641 is from the Mirošov locality, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Asturian) E1178, E1181 (material type).
A description of the in situ spores is as follows: The trilete spores are circular, subtriangular, or oval in amb. The laevigate exine of the microspores (
Figure 9j and
Figure 10a,b) is up to 2 µm and the megaspores (
Figure 9h,i,k,
Figure 10c–e,i,j, and
Figure 11b–f) are up to 3 µm thick. The rays of the trilete mark reach a third to three-quarters of the radius. Secondary folds of the exine possess variable sizes, shapes, positions, and numbers (
Figure 9j,
Figure 10a,b,e, and
Figure 11e,d). The size range (
Table 6) of the microspores is 54 (76) 125 µm, and the megaspores are 156 (265) 372 µm (
Table 7). The contact area and labrum are 2–4 µm in size and sometimes developed. The in situ microspores can be compared to the dispersed miospore species
Calamospora mutabilis,
C. cf.
pedata, and
C. cf.
liquida. Megaspores are classified as
Calamospora sp. due to their large diameters.
Calamostachys Schimper 1869
Calamostachys germanica Weiss 1976
Material: Nos. E1161 and E2409 are from the Třemošná locality, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Bolsovian); No. E2408 is from the Ignác Mine, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Bolsovian); No. E3620 is from the Kladno locality, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Bolsovian); No. E5641 is from the Na Brantech locality, Lubná, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Bolsovian).
A description of the in situ spores is as follows: The trilete spores are circular, subtriangular, or oval in amb. The laevigate exine of the microspores is up to 2 µm thick. The rays of the trilete mark reach a quarter to a half of the radius. Secondary folds of the exine possess variable sizes, shapes, positions, and numbers (
Figure 12a–h and
Figure 13c–j). The size range of the microspores is 54 (94) 126 µm, and the megaspores are 180 (357) 684 µm (
Table 8). The labrum is 2–4 µm broad, and the dark contact areas (
Figure 12a,d,f) are sometimes developed (
Figure 12e and
Figure 13a). The in situ microspores can be compared to the dispersed miospore species
Calamospora microrugosa,
C. cf.
mutabilis,
C. pallida,
C. cf.
pallida,
C. cf.
pedata,
C. breviradiata, and
C. hartungiana; the megaspores are classified as
Calamospora sp. due to their large diameters (up to 684 µm).
Calamostachys incrassata Němejc 1953
Material: No. E1114, is from the V Krčeláku locality, Rako Mine near the Lubná, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Bolsovian).
A description of the in situ spores is as follows: The trilete spores are circular, subtriangular, or oval in amb. The laevigate exine of the microspores is up to 2 µm thick. The rays of the trilete mark reach a third of the radius. Secondary folds of the exine possess variable sizes, shapes, positions, and numbers (
Figure 14a–f). The size range is 51 (73) 88 µm. The labrum is 2–4 µm broad and is sometimes developed. The in situ microspores can be compared to the dispersed miospore species
Calamospora cf.
hartungiana. Some spores are 54 (75) 94 µm large and are enveloped in a very thin monopseudosaccate layer (
Figure 14c–f) and may resemble some forms of the miospores genera
Auroraspora Hoffmeister et al.,
Remysporites Butterworth & Williams,
Perotrilites Couper,
Phyllothecotriletes Luber, or even
Diaphanospora Balme.
Calamostachys longibracteata Němejc 1953
Material: No. E3605 is from the Kladno locality, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Bolsovian); Nos. E1154 and E1155 are from the Max Mine, Libušín, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Bolsovian); No. E1163 is from the Mayrau Mine, Vinařice, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Bolsovian).
A description of the in situ spores is as follows: The trilete spores are circular, subtriangular, or oval in amb. The laevigate exine of the microspores is up to 2 µm thick. The rays of the trilete mark reach a third to two-thirds of the radius. Secondary folds of the exine possess variable sizes, shapes, positions, and numbers (
Figure 14a–c,i,j,m–o). The size range is 45 (60) 83 µm (
Table 9). Sometimes, the outer perispore-like layer envelopes the central body of the
Calamospora type (
Figure 14k,l,p). The in situ microspores can be compared to the dispersed miospore species
Calamospora microrugosa,
C. pallida, and
C. pedata.Calamostachys tuberculata (Sternberg) Jongmans 1911
Material: Collection of S. Opluštil: Nos. 1238 and 1951 are from the Kladno locality, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Kasimovian (Lower Stephanian); No. E3589 is from the Lubná locality, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Bolsovian); E1152 is from the Mirošov locality, Kladno-Rakovnk Basin, Moscovian (Asturian); No. E1148 is from the Doubrava locality, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Asturian); No. E1147 is from the Kladno locality, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Bolsovian).
A description of the in situ spores is as follows: The trilete spores are circular, subtriangular, or oval in amb. The laevigate exine of the microspores is up to 2 µm thick. The rays of the trilete mark reach a third to two-thirds of the radius. Secondary folds of the exine possess variable sizes, shapes, positions, and numbers (
Figure 15q and
Figure 16c,d). The size range is 30 (61) 110 µm in diameter (
Table 10). The labrum is 2–4 µm broad and is sometimes developed. Some specimens have irregular fragments of perisporial tissue (
Figure 15o,p,r and
Figure 16a–d). The in situ microspores can be compared to the dispersed miospore species
Calamospora microrugosa,
C. cf.
pedata,
C. straminea, and
C. breviradiata.Calamostachys cf. ramosa Weiss 1884
Material: No. E3634 is from the Maria-Julia Mine, Žacléř, Intra-Sudetic Basin, Bashkirian (Langsettian-Duckmantian); No. E3627 is from the Ronna Mine, Kladno-Rakovník Basin. Moscovian (Bolsovian).
A description of the in situ spores is as follows: The trilete spores are circular, subtriangular, or oval in amb. The laevigate exine of the microspores is up to 2 µm thick. The rays of the trilete mark reach a third of the radius. Secondary folds of the exine possess variable sizes, shapes, positions, and numbers (
Figure 17c,d,h,j,l). The size range is 48 (62) 89 µm in diameter. The in situ microspores can be compared to the dispersed miospore species
Calamospora cf.
microrugosa. Some specimens are 49 (65) 99 µm in size and are enveloped by a thin monopseudosaccate layer and can resemble some forms of the miospore genera
Auroraspora,
Remysporites,
Perotrilites,
Phyllothecotriletes, or even
Diaphanospora, and some others have irregular fragments of perisporial tissue (
Figure 17e,h,i,k,l).
Calamostachys intermedia Feistmantel 1872
Material: Nos. E2410 and E1174 are from the Stradonice locality near Beroun, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Bolsovian).
A description of the in situ spores is as follows: The trilete spores are circular, subtriangular, or oval in amb. The laevigate exine of the microspores is up to 2 µm thick. The rays of the trilete mark reach half to two-thirds of the radius. Secondary folds of the exine possess variable sizes, shapes, positions, and numbers (
Figure 17n–q). The size range is 34 (85) 137 µm. The labrum is 2–4 µm broad and is sometimes developed (
Figure 17n,o). The in situ microspores can be compared to the dispersed miospore species
Calamospora cf.
liquida and
C. cf.
pedata.Calamostachys grandis (Zeiller) Jongmans 1911
Material: Collection of S. Opluštil, No. 1625, from the Kladno locality, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Bolsovian).
A description of the in situ spores is as follows: The trilete spores are circular, subtriangular, or oval in amb. The laevigate exine of the microspores is up to 2 µm thick. The rays of the trilete mark reach a third to a half of the radius. Secondary folds of the exine possess variable sizes, shapes, positions, and numbers (
Figure 18b–f). The size range is 52 (58) 70 µm. The in situ microspores can be compared to the dispersed miospore species
Calamospora breviradiata.Material: Nos. E3638 and E3639 are from the Tuchlovice locality, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Bolsovian).
A description of the in situ spores is as follows: The trilete spores are circular, subtriangular, or oval in amb. The laevigate exine of the microspores is up to 2 µm thick. The rays of the trilete mark reach three-quarters of the radius. Secondary folds of the exine possess variable sizes, shapes, positions, and numbers (
Figure 18i,j). The size range of the microspores is 45 (67) 82 µm, and the megaspores are (
Figure 18h) 610 (703) 815 µm. The labrum is 2–4 µm broad and is sometimes developed. The in situ microspores can be compared to the dispersed miospore species
Calamospora cf.
liquida and
C. cf.
flexilis, and the megaspores are classified as
Calamospora sp. due to their large diameters.
Huttonia Sternberg 1837
Huttonia spicata Sternberg 1837
Material: No. E3614 is from the Ovčín locality, Radnice Basin, Moscovian (Bolsovian); Nos. E2419, E75, and E76 are from the Vranovice locality, Kladno-Rakovník Basin, Moscovian (Bolsovian).
A description of the in situ spores is as follows: The trilete spores are circular, subtriangular, or oval in amb. The laevigate exine of the microspores is up to 1–4 µm thick. The rays of the trilete mark reach a third to two-thirds of the radius. Secondary folds of the exine possess variable sizes, shapes, positions, and numbers (
Figure 19d,f,g). The size range of the microspores is 66 (84) 114 µm, and the megaspores are (
Figure 19g) 115 (166) 240 µm. The labrum is 2–4 µm broad and is sometimes developed. The in situ microspores can be compared to the dispersed miospore species
Calamospora cf.
breviradiata,
C. cf.
pedata, and the megaspores are of the
Calamospora laevigata type. Some specimens are enveloped in a thin monopseudosacccate exine layer (
Figure 18e) and can resemble some forms of miospore genera
Auroraspora,
Remysporites,
Perotrilites, or even
Diaphanospora.
6. Elaterites
Spores of the genus
Elaterites Wilson are very rare in the dispersed record. The genus was established [
30] for spores with three elaters enveloping a central body of the
Calamospora type. These microspores are very rarely reported [
30,
31,
32,
33]. Seventeen species of genera, such as the
Calamocarpon Baxter,
Calamostachys,
Mazostachys,
Palaeostachya,
Pendulostachys Good,
Pothocites Paterson, and
Weissistachys Rothwell & Taylor, yielded spores of the
Elaterites type from mainly petrified (
Table 11) [
9,
21] and adpression [
15] specimens. The size range of these microspores is 38 (78) 280 µm, and almost all of them are 38–112 µm in diameter, except for those isolated from
Calamostachys americana Arnold, which is unusually large (140–280 µm) [
10]. Some authors [
10,
12,
34] propose that all calamiteans produced microspores of the
Elaterites type. We have studied hundreds of palynological slides with in situ
Calamospora populations in different stages of ontogeny, macerated from sixty specimens of calamitean cones, and we have never seen any elaters or any elater-like structures or their fragments. It is evident that there is a group of calamitean cones that produced spores of the
Elaterites type, but the majority of them yielded only spores of the
Calamospora type. Some authors [
10,
12,
24] have proposed that
Vestispora represents an ontogenetic stage of
Calamospora. The authors of [
35] excluded this theory based on some main points, and the authors confirmed their conclusions.
Vestispora is characterized by a homogeneous outermost exine layer and small circular operculum lying above the proximal pole of the central body of the Calamospora type. Elaterite spores lack an operculum, and there is always a space among three elaters, i.e., the outer layer is not homogeneous. Elaters of Elaterites originate from a small triangular area on the distal pole, i.e., opposite to the proximal surface with a small circular operculum. Anything resembling such a triangular distal structure has never been observed on the Calamospora spores described herein. The structure of Elaterites is monotonous, but the sculpture of Vestispora is variable, including laevigate, foveolate, costate, and primary and secondary reticulate.
The second point is that
Vestispora and
Calamospora spores were produced by different plants.
Vestispora was not produced by any calamiteans. The major
Vestispora producer was one group of sphenophyllaleans [
33]. Another small group of sphenophyllaleans produced calamospores but only
Calamospora and not
Calamospora and
Vestispora together.
Calamospora ranges from the Devonian to the Cenozoic, whereas
Vestispora-producers range from the Brigantian to late Kasimovian. As a consequence, almost all
Vestispora-producing sphenophyllaleans are good stratigraphical markers, but calamitean spores are not.
Elaterites have an even shorter stratigraphical range, ranging through only a part of the Pennsylvanian [
36]. Almost all
Vestispora-producing sphenophyllaleans are good stratigraphical markers [
37], but calamiteans are not.
Elaterites have an even shorter stratigraphical range, only a part of the Pennsylvanian [
35].
The third point concerns different ultrastructure sections of the exine (TEM) of
Elaterites [
38] and
Vestispora [
39]. Elaters of
Elaterites are three-layered [
39], while the exospore of
Vestispora is only bi-layered [
40].
When in situ,
Elaterites are reported only from coal-ball calamitean cones and not from adpressions. The only roughly similar spore structures are hygroscopic elaters of the recent
Equisetum spores, which show that their ultrastructure is different. The sporoderm of
Equisetum spores has an endospore, exospore, perispore, and bi-layered elaters [
38], but the
Elaterites are only bi-layered, and elaters have three layers.
Vestispora spores have a circular laevigate central body with trilete marks and outer exospores with a circular operculum. Sometimes, in palynological slides with in situ
Vestispora, it is possible to observe various degrees of mechanical damage in the exospores and that the central body is of the
Calamospora type. However,
Vestispora is not a relatively immature
Calamospora because we have never observed any ontogenetic stages of
Vestispora. Table 11 shows all the
Elaterites producing calamitean plants.