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Rare fossils show early trees with forms unlike any you’ve ever seen

6 February 2024

By Kendall Morgan, PhD

Co-authors Matt Stimson, Assistant Curator of Geology/Paleontology at the New Brunswick Museum, and Prof Patricia Gensel of UNC Chapel Hill record observations about fossilized tree (Photo by Alan Graham)

Co-authors Matt Stimson, Assistant Curator of Geology/Paleontology at the New Brunswick Museum, and Prof Patricia Gensel of UNC Chapel Hill record observations about fossilized tree (Photo by Alan Graham)

Researchers report on “a unique and a strange growth form in the history of life” that looks like it comes from the imagination of Dr Seuss

In the fossil record, trees typically are preserved with only their trunks. They don’t usually include any leaves to show what their canopies and overall forms may have looked like. But now, researchers reporting in the journal Current Biology on February 2 describe fossilized trees from New Brunswick, Canada, with a surprising and unique three-dimensional crown shape.

“The way in which this tree produced hugely long leaves around its spindly trunk, and the sheer number over a short length of trunk, is startling,” says corresponding author Dr Robert Gastaldo opens in new tab/window, Professor Emeritus of Geology at Colby College in Waterville, Maine.

The forms taken by these 350-million-year-old trees look something like a fern or palm, even though palms didn’t arise until 300 million years later, he explains. However, the functional leaves in ferns or palm trees cluster at the top and are relatively few.

“In contrast, Sanfordiacaulis preserves more than 250 leaves around its trunk, with each partially preserved leaf extending 1.75 meters from it,” Gastaldo says. “We estimate that each leaf grew at least another meter before terminating. This means that the ‘bottle brush’ had a dense canopy of leaves that extended at least 5.5 meters (or 18 feet) around a trunk that was non-woody and only 16 centimeters (or 0.5 feet) in diameter. Startling to say the least.”

Sanfordiacaulis densifolia reconstruction (Source: Figure 6, Robert A Gastaldo, et al, Current Biology Feb 2024)

Sanfordiacaulis densifolia reconstruction. (A) Scaled reconstruction of S. densifolia consisting of a monopodial trunk surrounded by compound leaves in an estimated 1/13 phyllotaxis; base of trunk unknown. Change in petiolar cross-sectional geometry (see Figure 4) used in Blender model. Global average male height (1.75 m) and female height (1.6 m) are scaled adjacent to the tree for illustrative purposes. Scale in meters. (B) Insert showing the multi-level departure of mudcast laterals for comparative purposes. NBM 22403/1. Coin for scale. (C) Changes in proximal to distal petiole/rachis cross-sectional geometries. Numbers correlate to leaf position in (A). (Source: Figure 6, Robert A Gastaldo, et al, Current Biology Feb 2024)

This work was made possible by a long-term international collaboration with paleontologists Matthew Stimson opens in new tab/window and Olivia King opens in new tab/window of the New Brunswick Museum, Saint John, and Saint Mary’s University in Halifax. The researchers’ findings offer important insights into the evolution of plants and arborescence, meaning plants that grow to a tree height, or at least 15 feet at maturity. They’re also a reminder that over the history of life on Earth, there have existed trees that look unlike any we’ve ever seen before and some that look as though they may come from the imagination of Dr Seuss, the researchers say.

“We all have a mental concept of what a tree looks like, depending on where we live on the planet, and we have a vision of what is familiar,” Gastaldo says. “The fossil on which we report is unique and a strange growth form in the history of life. It is one of evolution’s experiments during a time when forest plants underwent biodiversification, and it is a form that seems to be short lived.”

The fossils in question were preserved by earthquake-induced, catastrophic burial of trees and other vegetation along the margin of a rift lake. The first fossil tree was unearthed about 7 years ago from a quarry, but it only included one partial sample. It took several years for another four specimens of the same plant, in close spatial proximity, to also be found, Gastaldo says.

One of the specimens revealed how the leaves departed from the top of the tree, which makes it “absolutely unique.” It’s one of only a few in a fossil record spanning more than 400 million years in which a trunk is preserved around which the crown leaves are still attached, the researchers say.

“Any fossil tree with an intact crown is a rarity in the history of life,” Gastaldo says. “Having the crown leaves attached to a trunk, by itself, begs the questions what kind of plant is it, how is that plant organized — and is it some form that continues to the present, or is it outside of the ‘normal’ concept of a tree? All of these questions, and more, led to this multi-year endeavor.”

The researchers report that the tree likely relied on its unusual growth form to maximize the amount of light it could capture and reduce its competition with other plants on the ground. They suggest that the tree now represents the earliest evidence of smaller trees growing beneath a taller forest canopy. It means that plant life in the Early Carboniferous period was more complex than expected, suggesting Sanfordiacaulis lived at a time when plants were “experimenting” with a variety of possible forms or architectures.

“The history of life on land consists of plants and animals that are unlike any of those that live at the present,” Gastaldo says. “Evolutionary mechanisms operating in the deep past resulted in organisms that successfully lived over long periods of time, but their shapes, forms, growth architectures, and life histories undertook different trajectories and strategies. Rare and unusual fossils, such as the New Brunswick tree, is but one example of what colonized our planet but was an unsuccessful experiment.”

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Kendall Morgan, PhD

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Kendall Morgan, PhD

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