Horneophyton
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Horneophyton Fossil range: Silurian-Devonian[verification needed] |
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||
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Binomial name | ||||||||||
Horneophyton lignieri |
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Synonyms | ||||||||||
Hornea |
Horneophyton was an early plant which may form a "missing link" between the "rhyniophytes" and hornworts. It is among the most abundant organisms found in the Rhynie chert.
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[edit] History
Its original generic name Hornea[1] transpired to be a synonym, leading to the plant's renaming.[2]
[edit] Morphology
The female gametophyte of the plant has been recognised and described as the form taxon Langiophyton mackiei.[3] It grew to a height of around 6 cm, and was free living.
Early stages of development of the sporophytes of Horneophyton (as of hornworts) may have been parasitic on their parent gametophytes, but the corms of mature specimens bore rhizoids and appear to be anchored in soil, suggesting a capacity for independent existence after the gametophyte had degenerated. The sporophyte had unornamented axes about 2 mm in diameter with an undivided cortex, and stomata were rare. There was a thin central strand of vascular tissue, reinforced with spiral and reticulate thickenings[citation needed]. They bore terminal sporangia, occasionally branched, which contained a central collumella, analogous to the sporangia of hornworts; however, hornworts' sporangia do not dichotomise.
[edit] Habitat
Horneophyton grew on sandy, organic-rich soil in damp to wet locations. They usually grew as isolated individuals.[4]
[edit] Phylogeny
Liverworts |
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With vascular tissue but "bryophyte"-like alternation of phases and sporangia, the organism has been considered a missing link between the hornworts and tracheophytes (which molecular data suggest are sister groups).[5]
Features suggesting a close relationship with the hornworts include the form of its sporangia; its corm also resembles the foot of some hornworts. The free living nature of sporophytes, and the fact that they display branching, are marked differences which force it into the stem group.
[edit] External links
- Horneophyton at the University of Aberdeen. Includes images.
[edit] References
- ^ Kidston, R. & Lang, W. H. 1920 On Old Red Sandstone plants showing structure, from the Rhynie chert bed, Aberdeenshire. Part II. Additional notes on Rhynia gwynne-vaughani Kidston and Lang; with descriptions of Rhynia major, n.sp., and Hornia lignieri, n.g., n.sp. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, 52(24): 603-627.
- ^ Barghoorn, E. S. & Darrah, W. C. 1938. Horneophyton a necessary change of name for Hornea. Harvard University Botanical Museum Leaflets, 6: 142-144.
- ^ Remy, W.; Hass, H. (1991). "Langiophyton mackiei nov. gen., nov. spec., ein Gametophyt mit Archegoniophoren aus dem Chert von Rhynie (Unterdevon Schottland)" (in German). Argumenta Palaeobotanica 8: 69-117.
- ^ Paul Selden, John Nudds: Fenster zur Evolution. Berühmte Fossilfundstellen der Welt. Elsevier Spektrum Akademischer Verlag, München 2007, S. 53. ISBN 978-3-8274-1771-8
- ^ Qiu, Y.L.; Li, L.; Wang, B.; Chen, Z.; Knoop, V.; Groth-malonek, M.; Dombrovska, O.; Lee, J.; Kent, L.; Rest, J.; Others, (2006). "The deepest divergences in land plants inferred from phylogenomic evidence". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 103 (42): 15511. doi: .