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Tetracentron is a genus of flowering plant with a sole living species being Tetracentron sinense and several extinct species. It was formerly considered the sole genus in the family Tetracentraceae, though it is now included in the family Trochodendraceae together with the genus Trochodendron.

Tetracentron
Tetracentron sinense, leaves and flowers
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Trochodendrales
Family: Trochodendraceae
Genus: Tetracentron
Oliv.
Species

Range

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The living Tetracentron sinense is native to southern China and the eastern Himalaya, where it grows at altitudes of 1,100–3,500 m (3,600–11,500 ft) in a temperate climate; it has no widely used common name in English, though is sometimes called "spur-leaf".[citation needed]

Wood vessels

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Tetracentron shares with Trochodendron the feature, very unusual in angiosperms, of lacking vessel elements in its wood. This has long been considered a very primitive character, resulting in the classification of these two genera in a basal position in the angiosperms; however, research in Molecular phylogenetics by the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group and others has shown that these two genera are not basal angiosperms, but basal eudicots.[1][2] This suggests that the absence of vessel elements is a secondarily evolved character, not a primitive one.

Fossil record

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The fossil record, extending back to the Eocene, shows a much wider distribution than modern times. Fossils of this genus have been found in British Columbia, Canada,;[3] Alaska,[3] Washington state, United States;[3] and Iceland.[4] The Miocene Tetracentron atlanticum, described in 2008, is the first confirmed record of the genus in Europe. This species was described from pollen, fruits, and leaves found in Iceland.

Specimens from British Columbia and Washington state are found in a series of Eocene Lakes in the Okanagan Highlands region in association with several extinct Trochodendron species. The Paleogene species Tetracentron piperoides from Alaska is currently regarded as suspect due to the lack of associated fruits.[3]

Species

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References

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  1. ^ Andreas Worberg, Dietmar Quandt, Anna-Magdalena Barniske, Cornelia Löhne, Khidir W. Hilu, and Thomas Borsch. 2007. "Phylogeny of basal eudicots: Insights from non-coding and rapidly evolving DNA." Organisms Diversity and Evolution 7(1):55-77. (see "External links" below).
  2. ^ Burleigh, J. Gordon; Hilu, Khidir W.; Soltis, Douglas E. (2009). "Inferring phylogenies with incomplete data sets: a 5-gene, 567-taxon analysis of angiosperms". BMC Evolutionary Biology. 9 (1): 61. Bibcode:2009BMCEE...9...61B. doi:10.1186/1471-2148-9-61. PMC 2674047. PMID 19292928.
  3. ^ a b c d Pigg, K.B.; Wehr, W.C.; Ickert-Bond, S.M. (2001), "Trochodendron and Nordenskioldia (Trochodendraceae) from the Middle Eocene of Washington State, U.S.A.", International Journal of Plant Sciences, 162 (5): 1187, doi:10.1086/321927
  4. ^ Grímsson, F.; Denk, T.; Zetter, R. (2008), "Pollen, fruits, and leaves of Tetracentron (Trochodendraceae) from the Cainozoic of Iceland and western North America and their palaeobiogeographic implications", Grana, 73 (2): 1, Bibcode:2008Grana..47....1G, doi:10.1080/00173130701873081
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