Sequoia affinis

Extinct species of conifer

Sequoia affinis
A fossilized S. affinis branchlet, Eocene.
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Gymnospermae
Division: Pinophyta
Class: Pinopsida
Order: Cupressales
Family: Cupressaceae
Genus: Sequoia
Species:
S. affinis
Binomial name
Sequoia affinis
Lesq.

Sequoia affinis is an extinct[1] species of the genus Sequoia in the cypress family Cupressaceae.

The name Sequoia sometimes refers to the subfamily Sequoioideae, which includes the still-living Sequoia sempervirens along with Sequoiadendron (giant sequoia) and Metasequoia (dawn redwood). On its own, the term redwood usually refers to the coast redwood (Sequoia sempervirens), and not to species in the other genera.

There are many Sequoia fossils found at the Florissant fossil beds in Florissant, Colorado, including Sequoia affinis.[2] A trio of Sequoia affinis fossilized stumps—believed to be three basal shoot clones of one original parent tree—has been reconstructed at this site.[3]

Many branches of fossil Sequoia from Florissant have foliage with spreading leaves, which is also common in the modern Sequoia. The leaves in the fossil species, however, are usually thinner and more delicate. An example of the leaves of Sequoia affinis has been featured on a postcard in a series on "Tertiary Fossil Plants," issued by the British Museum of Natural History in the early 1920s. It has also been suggested that Sequoia affinis may be ancestral to both Sequoia sempervirens and Sequoiadendron giganteum (Sierra redwood).[2]

Typically the female cones of Sequoia affinis are only 50-70% of the length of modern redwood cones. This information, paired with other differences in the wood, foliage, and pollen, show the distinction between Sequoia affinis and Sequoia sempervirens.[2]

Fossilized Sequoia affinis pollen has been discovered in lake-sediment shale at the site in Florissant, Colorado.[3]

References

  1. ^ Gregory, KM (1992). Late Eocene paleoelevation, paleoclimate, and paleogeography of the Front Range region, Colorado (Thesis). University of Arizona.
  2. ^ a b c Meyer, Herbert W (2003). The Fossils of Florissant. Smithsonian books. pp. 84–87. ISBN 9781588341075.
  3. ^ a b "Sequoia affinis Reconconstruction". Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument (U.S. National Park Service). 2022-01-25. Retrieved 2022-05-31.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Extant Cupressaceae species
Subfamily Athrotaxidoideae
Athrotaxis
  • A. cupressoides
  • A. selaginoides
  • A. laxifolia
Subfamily Callitroideae
Actinostrobus
  • A. acuminatus
  • A. arenarius
  • A. pyramidalis
Austrocedrus
  • A. chilensis
Callitris
  • C. baileyi
  • C. canescens
  • C. columellaris
  • C. drummondii
  • C. endlicheri
  • C. macleayana
  • C. monticola
  • C. muelleri
  • C. neocaledonica
  • C. oblonga
  • C. preissii
  • C. rhomboidea
  • C. roei
  • C. sulcata
  • C. verrucosa
Diselma
  • D. archeri
Fitzroya
  • F. cupressoides
Libocedrus
  • L. austrocaledonicus
  • L. bidwillii
  • L. chevalieri
  • L. plumosa
  • L. yateensis
Neocallitropsis
  • N. pancheri
Papuacedrus
  • P. papuana
Pilgerodendron
  • P. uviferum
Widdringtonia
  • W. cedarbergensis
  • W. nodiflora
  • W. schwarzii
  • W. whytei
Subfamily Cunninghamioideae
Cunninghamia
  • C. konishii
  • C. lanceolata
Subfamily Cupressoideae
Callitropsis
  • C. nootkatensis
Calocedrus
  • C. decurrens
  • C. formosana
  • C. macrolepis
  • C. rupestris
Chamaecyparis
  • C. formosensis
  • C. lawsoniana
  • C. obtusa
  • C. pisifera
  • C. taiwanensis
  • C. thyoides
Cupressus
  • C. atlantica
  • C. austrotibetica
  • C. cashmeriana
  • C. chengiana
  • C. duclouxiana
  • C. dupreziana
  • C. funebris
  • C. gigantea
  • C. sempervirens
  • C. tonkinensis
  • C. torulosa
  • C. vietnamensis
Hesperocyparis
  • H. abramsiana
  • H. arizonica
  • H. bakeri
  • H. benthamii
  • H. forbesii
  • H. glabra
  • H. goveniana
  • H. guadalupensis
  • H. lusitanica
  • H. macnabiana
  • H. macrocarpa
  • H. montana
  • H. nevadensis
  • H. pygmaea
  • H. revealiana
  • H. sargentii
  • H. stephensonii
Fokienia
  • F. hodginsii
Juniperus
Section Juniperus
  • J.  brevifolia
  • J.  cedrus
  • J. communis
  • J. conferta
  • J. drupacea
  • J.  formosana
  • J.  lutchuensis
  • J.  macrocarpa
  • J.  oxycedrus
  • J. rigida
Section Sabina
Old World Species:
  • J.  chinensis
  • J.  convallium
  • J.  excelsa
  • J.  foetidissima
  • J.  indica
  • J.  komarovii
  • J.  phoenicea
  • J.  pingii
  • J.  procera
  • J.  procumbens
  • J.  pseudosabina
  • J.  recurva
  • J.  sabina
  • J.  saltuaria
  • J.  semiglobosa
  • J.  squamata
  • J.  thurifera
  • J.  tibetica
  • J.  wallichiana

New World Species:

  • J.  angosturana
  • J.  ashei
  • J.  arizonica
  • J.  barbadensis
  • J.  bermudiana
  • J.  blancoi
  • J.  californica
  • J.  coahuilensis
  • J.  comitana
  • J.  deppeana
  • J.  durangensis
  • J.  flaccida
  • J.  gamboana
  • J.  horizontalis
  • J.  jaliscana
  • J.  monosperma
  • J.  monticola
  • J.  occidentalis
  • J.  osteosperma
  • J.  pinchotii
  • J.  saltillensis
  • J.  scopulorum
  • J.  standleyi
  • J.  virginiana
  • J.  zanonii
Microbiota
  • M. decussata
  • Platycladus
    • P. orientalis
    Tetraclinis
    • T. articulata
    Thuja
    • T. koraiensis
    • T. occidentalis
    • T. plicata
    • T. standishii
    • T. sutchuenensis
    Thujopsis
    • T. dolabrata
    Xanthocyparis
    • X. vietnamensis
    Subfamily Sequoioideae
    Metasequoia
    • M. glyptostroboides
    Sequoia
    • S. sempervirens
    Sequoiadendron
    • S. giganteum
    Subfamily Taiwanioideae
    Taiwania
    • T. cryptomerioides
    Subfamily Taxodioideae
    Cryptomeria
    • C. japonica
    Glyptostrobus
    • G. pensilis
    Taxodium
    • T. ascendens
    • T. distichum
    • T. mucronatum
    Taxon identifiers
    Sequoia affinis


    Stub icon

    This article about a prehistoric conifer is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

    • v
    • t
    • e