News
World's oldest flower found in China
Scientists say they have found the fossilised remains of the earliest
known flower. It was discovered in a slab of stone in north-east China
and the plant is thought to have lived at least 125 million years ago.
Researchers at the University of Florida, US, say the species could be
the predecessor of all flowering plants. They say it probably grew in
shallow lakes shared by dinosaurs and other prehistoric creatures.
The
plant, called Archaefructus sinensis or "ancient fruit from
China", is of a species never before seen, says David Dilcher, of the
Florida Museum of Natural History and the University of Florida. "It is
like the mother of all flowering plants," he adds.
Professor Dilcher is the co-author of a study published in the journal
Science. He worked with Ge Sun, a geologist at Jilin University in
Changchun, China, and other researchers.
Botanists had long considered a woody plant from New Caledonia as the
most ancient of flowering plants. But Professor Dilcher said the new
discovery was even older.
"It
changes our whole impression of what is the oldest of all flowering
plants," he said.
The
flower's closest "modern relative" was probably the water lily, said
Professor Dilcher, because it apparently lived in clear, shallow waters,
with its flowers and seeds extending above the surface.
The
discovery suggested that flowering plants started out as herbs that were
able to reproduce quickly, he said.
It
"was not a flashy flower," he said. The plant's flowering part had no
real petals, but acted only as a reproductive unit - essential for its
survival.
"The reason we can say it is a flowering plant is that the seed is
enclosed inside of carpels [female part] of the fruit," said Professor
Dilcher.
Other experts in Science said more research was needed before the new
flower was generally accepted as the most ancient of flowering plants.
But
Peter Raven, of the Missouri Botanical Garden in St Louis, said it "may
be the most significant flowering plant ever found".