Piecing together the eophytes - a new group of ancient plants containing cryptospores.

New Phytol

Department of Earth Sciences, Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London, SW7 5BD, UK.

Published: February 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The first evidence of land plants appears in the Ordovician period through cryptospores, which lasted for 60 million years, but direct evidence of their parent plants is found in fossils from the Welsh Borderland in the Silurian to Devonian periods.
  • - Researchers used HF to extract charcoalified fossils, allowing for detailed examination with scanning electron microscopy, focusing on their anatomy and the structure of their conducting cells.
  • - The findings suggest these ancient plants, named Eophytidae (eophytes), share anatomical similarities with modern bryophytes, particularly in their unique conductive cells that indicate they were adapted to survive in varying moisture conditions.

Article Abstract

The earliest evidence for land plants comes from dispersed cryptospores from the Ordovician, which dominated assemblages for 60 million years. Direct evidence of their parent plants comes from minute fossils in Welsh Borderland Upper Silurian to Lower Devonian rocks. We recognize a group that had forking, striated axes with rare stomata terminating in valvate sporangia containing permanent cryptospores, but their anatomy was unknown especially regarding conducting tissues. Charcoalified fossils extracted from the rock using HF were selected from macerates and observed using scanning electron microscopy. Promising examples were split for further examination and compared with electron micrographs of the anatomy of extant bryophytes. Fertile fossil axes possess central elongate cells with thick walls bearing globules, occasional strands and plasmodesmata-sized pores. The anatomy of these cells best matches desiccation-tolerant food-conducting cells (leptoids) of bryophytes. Together with thick-walled epidermal cells and extremely small size, these features suggest that these plants were poikilohydric. Our new data on conducting cells confirms a combination of characters that distinguish the permanent cryptospore-producers from bryophytes and tracheophytes. We therefore propose the erection of a new group, here named the Eophytidae (eophytes).

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.17703DOI Listing

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