Like many extinct trees, psaronius is known by various individual fossil parts that are not always found together. The main parts include: the root mantle, the stem, the fronds, the coziers (fiddleheads), and leaves with spores.
Root mantle An unusual feature is that
Psaronius did not have a true trunk, but had a massive root mantle formed by hundreds of rootlets. These rootlets are referred to as
adventitious because they are appearing in an atypical location. These adventitious roots originate in a central stem high in the tree. This central stem becomes smaller lower in the tree so that at the base the mantle is composed entirely of roots. In some specimens, this mantle is over 1.0 m in diameter at the base of the tree. The fossilized wood of this root mantle is simply referred to as
Psaronius. The side impressions of these adventitious roots are referred to as
Tubiculites by the French Geologist
François Cyrille Grand'Eury in 1877.
An ecosystem in the Psaronius root mantle Like modern tree ferns,
Psaronius included other plant species growing in the root mantle. It has been determined through cross-sections of petrified
Psaronius, that various vining and epiphytic plants were growing within the tree fern. Some Carboniferous plant species are only known from their fossilized remains within these root mantles. Some of these that have been studied extensively are the epiphyte
Botryopteris, the vining climber
Ankyropteris and the small climbing ferns called
Tubicaulis.
Fronds and leaves The leaves most often associated with
Psaronius are those known as
Pecopteris, but some species of
Psaronius bore
Sphenopteris foliage. Fossil of the croziers (or fiddleheads) of the fern fronds have been found. They sometimes go by the name
Spiropteris. The study of croziers associated with psaronius wood have been used to determine foliage associations. The fronds were often bipinnate and sometimes tripinnate. Other leaf taxon associated with
Psaronius include:
Asterotheca,
Acitheca,
Remia and
Radstockia. File:Psaronius petiole scars.png|Psaronius stem surface petiole base configurations.
A. Caulopteris .
B. Megaphyton .
C. Hagiophyton .
D. Artisophyton == Relationship to modern ferns ==