Experimental induction of resins as a tool to understand variability in ambers

IF 1.9 4区 地球科学 Q1 PALEONTOLOGY Fossil Record Pub Date : 2021-01-01 DOI:10.5194/fr-24-321-2021
L. Seyfullah, E. Roberts, P. Jardine, A. Schmidt
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Abstract. Amber is chiefly known as a preservational medium of biological inclusions, but it is itself a chemofossil, comprised of fossilised plant resin. The chemistry of today's resins has been long investigated as a means of understanding the botanical sources of ambers. However, little is known about the chemical variability of resins and consequently about that of the ambers that are derived from particular resins. We undertook experimental resin production in Araucariacean plants to clarify how much natural resin variability is present in two species, Agathis australis and Wollemia nobilis, and whether different resin exudation stimuli types can be chemically identified and differentiated. The latter were tested on the plants, and the resin exudates were collected and investigated with Fourier-transform infrared attenuated total reflection (FTIR-ATR) spectroscopy to give an overview of their chemistry for comparisons, including multivariate analyses. The Araucariacean resins tested did not show distinct chemical signatures linked to a particular resin-inducing treatment. Nonetheless, we did detect two separate groupings of the treatments for Agathis, in which the branch removal treatment and mimicked insect-boring treatment-derived resin spectra were more different from the resin spectra derived from other treatments. This appears linked to the lower resin viscosities observed in the branch- and insect-treatment-derived resins. However the resins, no matter the treatment, could be distinguished from both species. The effect of genetic variation was also considered using the same stimuli on both the seed-grown A. australis derived from wild-collected populations and on clonally derived W. nobilis plants with natural minimal genetic diversity. The variability in the resin chemistries collected did reflect the genetic variability of the source plant. We suggest that this natural variability needs to be taken into account when testing resin and amber chemistries in the future.
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树脂的实验诱导作为了解琥珀变异性的工具
摘要琥珀主要被认为是生物包裹体的保存介质,但它本身是一种化学化石,由植物树脂化石组成。长期以来,人们一直在研究当今树脂的化学性质,以了解琥珀的植物来源。然而,人们对树脂的化学变异性知之甚少,因此对来自特定树脂的琥珀的化学变异性也知之甚少。我们在原珊瑚纲植物中进行了树脂生产实验,以阐明两种植物(Agathis australis和Wollemia nobilis)中存在多少天然树脂变异性,以及是否可以化学识别和区分不同的树脂渗出刺激类型。后者在植物上进行了测试,并收集了树脂渗出物并用傅里叶变换红外衰减全反射(FTIR-ATR)光谱进行了研究,以概述它们的化学成分进行比较,包括多变量分析。被测试的原珊瑚树脂没有显示出与特定树脂诱导处理相关的明显化学特征。尽管如此,我们确实发现了两组不同的处理,其中树枝去除处理和模拟昆虫钻孔处理衍生的树脂光谱与其他处理衍生的树脂光谱差异更大。这似乎与在树枝和昆虫处理衍生的树脂中观察到的较低的树脂粘度有关。然而,树脂,无论处理,可以区分这两个物种。遗传变异的影响也被考虑使用相同的刺激在种子生长的南方南方和无性系衍生的自然最小遗传多样性的北方南方。收集到的树脂化学成分的变异性确实反映了源植物的遗传变异性。我们建议,在未来测试树脂和琥珀化学物质时,需要考虑到这种自然变异性。
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来源期刊
Fossil Record
Fossil Record PALEONTOLOGY-
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
7.10%
发文量
18
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Fossil Record (FR) is the palaeontological journal of the Museum für Naturkunde Berlin. This journal was founded in 1998 under the name Mitteilungen aus dem Museum für Naturkunde Berlin, Geowissenschaftliche Reihe and appears with two issues each year. Fossil Record publishes original papers in all areas of palaeontology including the taxonomy and systematics of fossil organisms, biostratigraphy, palaeoecology, and evolution. All taxonomic groups are treated, including invertebrates, microfossils, plants, and vertebrates.
期刊最新文献
The Rhabdodontidae (Dinosauria, Ornithischia), an enigmatic dinosaur group endemic to the Late Cretaceous European Archipelago Possible fungus-eating cucujiformian beetle larvae with setiferous processes from Cretaceous and Miocene ambers A description of a Denazinemys nodosa specimen (Testudinata, Baenidae) from the Late Cretaceous Kaiparowits Formation of southern Utah New findings of Prototherium ausetanum (Mammalia, Pan-Sirenia) from paving stones in Girona (Catalonia, Spain)? The helochelydrid turtle Helochelydra nopcsai from the Early Cretaceous (late Barremian – early Aptian) fissure fills of Balve, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, including a large sample of granicones
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