Dario De Franceschi
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by Dario De Franceschi.
Comptes Rendus De L Academie Des Sciences Serie Ii Fascicule A-sciences De La Terre Et Des Planetes | 1999
André Nel; Gaël De Ploëg; Jean Dejax; Didier B. Dutheil; Dario De Franceschi; Emmanuel Gheerbrant; Marc Godinot; Sophie Hervet; Jean-Jacques Menier; Marc Augé; Gérard Bignot; Carla Cavagnetto; Sylvain Duffaud; Jean Gaudant; Stéphane Hua; Akino Jpssang; Jean-Pierre Pozzi; Jean-Claude Paicheler; Françoise Beuchet; Jean-Claude Rage
A new fossil locality is reported from the argiles a lignite du Soisonnais (Early Ypresian, MP7) of the Oise region (France). After the preliminary survey of the flora and the vertebrate and arthropod faunas, we propose a reconstruction of a fluvio-lacustrine palaeoenvironment with a forest, under a warm and wet seasonal climate. This site is outstanding because of the richness, diversity and the state of preservation of the fossils. The present discovery opens a unique window on terrestrial life during the Earliest Eocene.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006
Pierre-Olivier Antoine; Dario De Franceschi; John J. Flynn; André Nel; Patrice Baby; Mouloud Benammi; Ysabel Calderón; Nicolas Espurt; Anjali Goswami; Rodolfo Salas-Gismondi
Tertiary insects and arachnids have been virtually unknown from the vast western Amazonian basin. We report here the discovery of amber from this region containing a diverse fossil arthropod fauna (13 hexapod families and 3 arachnid species) and abundant microfossil inclusions (pollen, spores, algae, and cyanophyceae). This unique fossil assemblage, recovered from middle Miocene deposits of northeastern Peru, greatly increases the known diversity of Cenozoic tropical–equatorial arthropods and microorganisms and provides insights into the biogeography and evolutionary history of modern Neotropical biota. It also strengthens evidence for the presence of more modern, high-diversity tropical rainforest ecosystems during the middle Miocene in western Amazonia.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Thierry Smith; Florence Quesnel; Gaël De Ploëg; Dario De Franceschi; Grégoire Métais; Eric De Bast; Floréal Solé; Annelise Folie; Anaïs Boura; Julien Claude; Christian Dupuis; Cyril Gagnaison; Alina I. Iakovleva; Jeremy E. Martin; François Maubert; Judicaël Prieur; Emile Roche; Jean-Yves Storme; Romain Thomas; Haiyan Tong; Johan Yans; Eric Buffetaut
The Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) is correlated with the first occurrences of earliest modern mammals in the Northern Hemisphere. The latest Paleocene Clarkforkian North American Land Mammal Age, that has yielded rodents and carnivorans, is the only exception to this rule. However, until now no pre-PETM localities have yielded modern mammals in Europe or Asia. We report the first Clarkforkian equivalent Land Mammal Age in the latest Paleocene deposits of the basal Sparnacian facies at Rivecourt, in the north-central part of the Paris Basin. The new terrestrial vertebrate and macroflora assemblages are analyzed through a multidisciplinary study including sedimentologic, stratigraphic, isotopic, and palynological aspects in order to reconstruct the paleoenvironment and to evaluate biochronologic and paleogeographic implications. The mammals are moderately diverse and not abundant, contrary to turtles and champsosaurs. The macroflora is exceptional in preservation and diversity with numerous angiosperms represented by flowers, fruits, seeds and wood preserved as lignite material, revealing an abundance of Arecaceae, Betulaceae, Icacinaceae, Menispermaceae, Vitaceae and probably Cornaceae. Results indicate a Late Paleocene age based on carbon isotope data, palynology and vertebrate occurrences such as the choristoderan Champsosaurus, the arctocyonid Arctocyon, and the plesiadapid Plesiadapis tricuspidens. However, several mammal species compare better with the earliest Eocene. Among these, the particular louisinid Teilhardimys musculus, also recorded from the latest Paleocene of the Spanish Pyrenees, suggests a younger age than the typical MP6 reference level. Nevertheless, the most important aspect of the Rivecourt fauna is the presence of dental remains of a rodent and a “miacid” carnivoran, attesting to the presence of two modern mammalian orders in the latest Paleocene of Europe. Interestingly, these two groups are also the only modern groups recorded from the latest Paleocene of North America, making Rivecourt the first direct equivalent to the Clarkforkian Land Mammal Age outside of North America.
Iawa Journal | 2007
Frédéric M.B. Jacques; Dario De Franceschi
Menispermaceae are comprised almost entirely of lianas. Study of its wood anatomy is of interest for understanding adaptation to the liana habit. We set out here to present a general overview of Menispermaceae wood. The wood anatomy of 77 species of 44 genera, representative of an tribes and from an continents, is described. The wood of 18 of these genera was previously unknown. We observed two secondary growth types within the family: wood with successive cambia and wood with a single cambium. The distribution of these types is partly consistent with the c1assification of the family by Diels. General characters of the family are: wide rays, enlarged vessel pits near the perforation plates, and pitted tyloses. The fun range of wood anatomical diversity is given in Table 1.
American Journal of Botany | 2013
Romain Thomas; Dario De Franceschi
PREMISE OF THE STUDY Through a comparative study of the anatomy of palm stems and the development of an interactive web-based tool, the present paper aims to provide a method of identifying palm stems. The stem determination will allow specialists in archaeology and paleontology to better exploit palm fossils for paleoenvironmental interpretations. The precise anatomical description also provides new systematic data tested in phylogenetic analyses (new anatomical characters, stratigraphic calibrations). METHODS Stem samples were collected, including representatives from each tribe of the five palm subfamilies, and 25 descriptors (with 78 states) were defined within 37 taxa and registered in Xper(2), a management tool for taxonomic description that allows editing of standardized descriptions. Some descriptors were used for the first time in this work; others were compiled from the existing literature. While all the palm subfamilies were included in the present study, the focus here is on the Coryphoideae. KEY RESULTS Descriptors were mainly based on the general organization of the transverse section and the structure of the fibrovascular bundles as well as ground parenchyma. Coryphoideae have 1, 2, or more metaxylem elements, whereas the other subfamilies systematically present only 1 or 1 and 2 metaxylem elements. The centrifugal differentiation of the sheath of phloem fibers is described in other subfamilies but is not found in the Coryphoideae (except in Caryoteae). CONCLUSION Some tribes are easy to identify (Borasseae, Cryosophileae, Phoeniceae, Caryoteae); others are rather heterogeneous and more difficult to define (Chuniophoeniceae, Trachycarpeae). Caryoteae presents some unique states of the Arecoideae.
Comptes Rendus De L Academie Des Sciences Serie Ii Fascicule A-sciences De La Terre Et Des Planetes | 2000
Dario De Franceschi; Jean Dejax; Gaël De Ploëg
Some amber fragments from Le Quesnoy (Oise) yield pollen, confined in this fossil resin. An extraction method has been devised in order to observe it under light and scanning electron microscopes. This method consists of a partial dissolution of the amber by organic solvents, which softens it and enables dissection of the fragments. The extracted pollen appears to be in an excellent state of preservation. The three-dimensional shape of the pollen grains is well preserved and their cell contents are still present. Thus, this method opens numerous study fields of this peculiar palynoflora. The diagnoses of the morphographic taxa observed, as well as their botanical relationships with modern taxa, can be re-examined. Other developments are explored, such as the study of the cell contents.Abstract Some amber fragments from Le Quesnoy (Oise) yield pollen, confined in this fossil resin. An extraction method has been devised in order to observe it under light and scanning electron microscopes. This method consists of a partial dissolution of the amber by organic solvents, which softens it and enables dissection of the fragments. The extracted pollen appears to be in an excellent state of preservation. The three-dimensional shape of the pollen grains is well preserved and their cell contents are still present. Thus, this method opens numerous study fields of this peculiar palynoflora. The diagnoses of the morphographic taxa observed, as well as their botanical relationships with modern taxa, can be re-examined. Other developments are explored, such as the study of the cell contents.
Insect Systematics & Evolution | 2011
Julián F. Petrulevičius; André Nel; Dario De Franceschi; C. Goillot; Pierre-Olivier Antoine; Rodolfo Salas-Gismondi; John J. Flynn
Sycorax peruensis sp.n. is the first blood sucking fossil Psychodidae in South America. The new species mainly differs from all recent Neotropical Sycoracinae in its number of antennal segments. It is described from the middle Miocene Western Amazonian amber, which included an intertropical entomofauna previous to the land connection with Central and North America that occurred in the latest MiocenePliocene. Insects from this material are diverse with normal bias for amber inclusions of Diptera and Hymenoptera and small-sized specimens.
Comptes Rendus De L Academie Des Sciences Serie Ii Fascicule A-sciences De La Terre Et Des Planetes | 2001
Jean Dejax; Dario De Franceschi; Bernard Lugardon; Gaël De Ploëg; Volker Arnold
The cell contents are still present inside almost every fossil pollen grain embedded in amber of two different origins (Lower Eocene amber from Paris Basin, Tertiary Baltic amber): they are here described after the observation of numerous extracted grains. Some structures are identified, among which probably the nucleus. Because of their confining in this very peculiar fossilization medium, the cell contents were not permineralized but remained somewhat close to the original organic condition, hence offering a field of research about fossil intracellular structure and palaeo-biochemistry, some organic molecules remaining potentially preserved.
Naturwissenschaften | 2006
Grégoire Métais; Pierre-Olivier Antoine; Syed Rafiqul Hassan Baqri; Mouloud Benammi; Jean-Yves Crochet; Dario De Franceschi; Laurent Marivaux; Jean-Loup Welcomme
Newly discovered fossil material of the enigmatic cetartiodactyl Bugtitherium grandincisivum from the upper Oligocene of the Bugti Member of the Chitarwata Formation in the Bugti Hills (Balochistan, Pakistan) is reported. These new specimens consist of two fragmentary muzzles (one preserving the first incisors and belonging to a juvenile) and a fragmentary right mandible with m3. The morphologies of the anterior dentition and m3 provided by these new specimens confirm the validity of the genus Bugtitherium and advocate probable anthracotheriid affinity for the genus rather than entelodontid or suoid affinities, but do not definitively close the debate about Bugtitherium’s familial affinities within Cetartiodactyla. Although still poorly documented, this large-sized anthracotheriid-like cetartiodactyl is a possible key form for understanding the early evolution of hippos, and, in turn, the ancestry of whales, because of both its morphological similarities with hippos and primitive Paleogene whales and its Tethysian distribution.
Trees-structure and Function | 2012
Cheryl D. Nath; Anaı̈s Boura; Dario De Franceschi; Raphaël Pélissier
The knowledge of tree age is important for understanding tree growth and forest dynamics. It may be estimated by ‘direct’ methods involving growth ring counts, or by ‘indirect’ methods involving field measurements of growth rates. Direct methods are considered more accurate, but it is not clear if they are appropriate for all species, notably from the humid tropics. In this paper we assess the occurrence of annual growth rings and their utility for age estimation in three tropical tree species, Acrocarpus fraxinifolius, Dalbergia latifolia (Fabaceae) and Syzygium cumini (Myrtaceae), growing in traditional shade coffee plantations of the southern Western Ghats, India. These species previously were described as having “indistinct or absent” growth rings. We used anatomical studies, field measurements and computational methods to characterise growth rings and assess similarities between directly and indirectly estimated tree ages. Our study revealed that annual growth rings were characterised by different sets of anatomical features per species and were most distinct in the fast-growing deciduous A. fraxinifolius. Growth rates measured in the field showed annual periodicity in all three species, and reflected annual rainfall-drought cycles in D. latifolia and S. cumini. Direct age estimates were most similar to indirect estimates in D. latifolia, and least so in S. cumini. The results of direct age estimation by counting rings are consistent with them being annual in nature in tropical species with distinct and reliable annual growth ring formation. However, for species with poorly defined growth rings, indirect age estimation methods might be more useful.