, an Early Devonian plant from Yunnan Province, China and its bearing on some structures of early land plants

1992 ◽  
Vol 71 (1-4) ◽  
pp. 121-147 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheng-Sen Li
2011 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 574-577 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin I. Bidartondo ◽  
David J. Read ◽  
James M. Trappe ◽  
Vincent Merckx ◽  
Roberto Ligrone ◽  
...  

The colonization of land by plants relied on fundamental biological innovations, among which was symbiosis with fungi to enhance nutrient uptake. Here we present evidence that several species representing the earliest groups of land plants are symbiotic with fungi of the Mucoromycotina. This finding brings up the possibility that terrestrialization was facilitated by these fungi rather than, as conventionally proposed, by members of the Glomeromycota. Since the 1970s it has been assumed, largely from the observation that vascular plant fossils of the early Devonian (400 Ma) show arbuscule-like structures, that fungi of the Glomeromycota were the earliest to form mycorrhizas, and evolutionary trees have, until now, placed Glomeromycota as the oldest known lineage of endomycorrhizal fungi. Our observation that Endogone -like fungi are widely associated with the earliest branching land plants, and give way to glomeromycotan fungi in later lineages, raises the new hypothesis that members of the Mucoromycotina rather than the Glomeromycota enabled the establishment and growth of early land colonists.


2000 ◽  
Vol 78 (2) ◽  
pp. 193-207 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michele E Kotyk ◽  
James F Basinger

Approximately 86 specimens of Bathurstia denticulata Hueber were collected from upper Bathurst Island and lower Stuart Bay beds of Bathurst Island, Canadian Arctic Archipelago. Bathurstia was a component of a zosterophyll-dominated flora of Pragian age (Lower Devonian) that existed at low paleolatitudes in northern Canada. The large collection of well-preserved materials permits reconstruction of the plant as a robust scrambler of about 30 cm in height. Stems bear short, shelf-like emergences in two rows, and branch isotomously, although sparsely. Rooting organs, representing some of the oldest known for land plants, arise from the main aerial axes, although they are also associated with small, subordinate shoots interpreted as plantlets. Numerous specimens are fertile, with sporangia borne in dense terminal spikes. Spikes include two rows of overlapping, discoid sporangia. Isospores are round and featureless, and assignable to the genus Calamospora. While Bathurstia apparently originated from among the isotomously branching bilaterally symmetrical zosterophylls, the phylogenetic relationships of Bathurstia to known taxa is unclear, although some resemblance to Serrulacaulis, Barinophytaceae, and the Gosslingiaceae can be documented. Bathurstia denticulata is now one of the best known of early land plants, and contributes significantly to our understanding of zosterophylls and their role in Early Devonian vegetation.Key words: Bathurstia, zosterophyll, Devonian, Canada, Arctic, evolution.


After three decades of vigorous research on the Siluro-Devonian floras neither interest nor productivity is slackening. Some newer developments and comments on the two previous papers are listed here to highlight the varied disciplines and approaches that are being brought to bear on Silurian-early Devonian floras. (i) Banks (1981) reported wounds, probably inflicted by chewing microarthropods, in axes of Psilophyton dawsonii repaired by the form ation of a periderm . Unreported evidence indicates wounding and repair stimulated by piercing and sucking activity of other animals. These observations complement the work of Kevan et al. (1975) on arthropods and damage to plants that are found in the Rhynie Chert, and that of Shear et al . (1984) on a new terrestrial fauna from eastern New York. Interest in plant-anim al interrelationships will attract a new group of scholars to the study of Siluro-Devonian plants. Particularly im portant will be the m aceration of large quantities of rock. (ii) Stubblefield & Banks (1983) found oomycetous fungi within cells in the cellularly perm ineralized aerial axes of Psilophyton dawsonii . Rayner (1983) reported apparent fungal bodies in the spines on compression specimens of Sawdonia ornata . These reports supplem ent that by Kevan et al . (1975) on the fungi in the Rhynie Chert. Whether the fungi were parasitic or saprophytic, or were mycorrhizal as suggested by Pirozynski & Malloch (1975), is unclear on the basis of present evidence. Sherwood-Pike & Gray (1985) have isolated hyphae and spores of higher fungi from macerates of mid to late Silurian rocks from Gotland. Other fragments appear to be coprolites of arthropods that include fragments of hyphae. They suggest that fungi and microarthropods may have served as terrestrial decomposers during late Silurian. Pratt et al. (1978) reported septate fungi in earliest Silurian. These introductory works imply a productive future in the study of Siluro-Devonian terrestrial fungi.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Datu Adiatma ◽  
◽  
Matthew R. Saltzman ◽  
Seth A. Young ◽  
Elizabeth M. Griffith ◽  
...  

Science ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 372 (6544) ◽  
pp. 803.18-805
Author(s):  
Pamela J. Hines

Phytotaxa ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 208 (1) ◽  
pp. 97 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tamas Pócs ◽  
Rui-Liang Zhu ◽  
Elena Reiner-Drehwald ◽  
Lars Söderström ◽  
Anders Hagborg ◽  
...  

For the coming checklist of hornworts and liverworts (Söderström et al., in press) a few validations, transfers and synonymizations in the family Lejeuneaceae are still required. 


Phytotaxa ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 208 (1) ◽  
pp. 75 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lars Söderström ◽  
Anders Hagborg ◽  
Matt Von Konrat

Plagiochilaceae is here circumscribed to include 10 genera, Acrochila, Chiastocaulon, Dinckleria, Pedinophyllopsis, Pedinophyllum, Plagiochila, Plagiochilidium, Plagiochilion, Pseudolophocolea and Xenochila. For the forthcoming world checklist of hornworts and liverworts we here summarize the current knowledge and identify the sections of Plagiochila that are currently recognized by morphological and molecular studies. Plagiochila is provisionally divided into 28 sections based on recent morphological and molecular studies. Plagiochila ecuadorica and Plagiochila sciophila subsp. ciliigera are new combinations, Plagiochila umbrosioides is a nomen novum.


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