Evolution And Paleobotany

Gymnosperms were the first seed plants to have evolved. The earliest seedlike bodies are found in rocks of the Upper Devonian Series (about 382.7 million to 358.9 million years ago). During the course of the evolution of the seed habit, a number of morphological modifications were necessary. First, all seed plants are heterosporous, meaning that two kinds of spores (microspores and megaspores) are produced by the sporophyte. Hence, it is assumed that the ancestors of seed plants were heterosporous. Secondly, sporangia of seedless plants typically lack an integument, which forms the seed coat in gymnosperms. Fossil ovules discovered in Scotland suggest that integuments originated during the Mississippian subdivision of the Carboniferous Period (about 358.9 million to 323.2 million years ago). The ovules of Genomosperma kidstonii, for example, consisted of an elongated megasporangium with one functional megaspore and featured eight elongated fingerlike processes that loosely surrounded the megasporangium. In a related species, G. latens, those eight fingerlike processes were fused at the base into a cup and covered the megasporangium rather closely.

The extinct division Progymnospermophyta is thought to be ancestral to seed plants. The best-known progymnosperm is the Devonian Archaeopteris, originally assumed to be a fern, with wedge-shaped subdivided leaflets known as pinnules and sporangia borne on appendages in between the pinnules. Its wood was like that of many conifers, consisting of tracheids and vascular rays, with closely spaced circular bordered pits on the radial walls of the tracheids. Pits were clustered, separated from other clusters by an area of the wall lacking pits. At least some species are known to have been heterosporous. Archaeopteris had many of the features to be anticipated in a seed-plant ancestor and likely gave rise to more than one group of gymnosperms.


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