- Rhyniophyta
Taxobox
name = Rhyniophytes
fossil_range =Early Devonian
image_width =
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regnum =Plant ae
divisio = Rhyniophyta †
classis = Rhyniopsida †
subdivision_ranks =
subdivision =
synonyms =Rhyniophyta is a division of early
vascular plant s including the class Rhyniopsida. Its circumscription of included species has changed as additional information is revealed in the form of new fossils or new analysis. In particular, some specimens previously included in the group are now known to lack vascular tissue, and so cannot be included in the group if it is to be monophyletic. Currently, the group is reduced to include the genera "Huvenia ", "Rhynia ", and "Stockmansella ", all from theDevonian . One of the most important radiations for land plants occurred in the earlyDevonian (Pragian), when the first rhyniophytes appear in the fossil record,cite book | last = Kenrick | first = Paul | coauthors = Peter R. Crane | year = 1997 | title = The Origin and Early Diversification of Land Plants : A Cladistic Study | location = Washington, D.C. | publisher = Smithsonian Institution Press | pages=pp. 139-140, 249 | isbn = 1-56098-730-8 ] making this rich fossil discovery of major importance topaleobotany . The general term "rhyniophytes" or "rhyniophytoids" is sometimes used for the assemblage of
left|thumb|240px|Cladogram_of_the_land plants showing the position of the "rhyniophytes" (in blue). Diagram based on Kenrick & Crane 1997. More recent molecular research reverses the position of the hornworts and mosses. [Qiu "et al." 2006]plant s found in theRhynie chert Lagerstätte - rich fossil beds inAberdeenshire ,Scotland , and roughlycoeval sites with similar flora. Thus, these terms refer to afloristic assemblage of more or less related early landplants, not ataxon . Though the rhyniophytes are well-represented, plants with simpleranatomy , like "Aglaophyton ", are also common.The Rhynie flora are unusual for their excellent preservation of very early fossils of primitive
vascular plant s, in addition to plants with uncertain vascular traces, and non-vascular plants. The fossils contain sufficient cellular detail to tell which plants are the sporophyte generation due to the presence of sporangia. In addition, because the plants were buried in-situ, rather than transported before burial, important distinguishing features, such as reproductive structures, are found attached to their parent plants. The site appears to include sporophytes and gametophytes of the same species and other organisms, such as arthropods, that lived in the Rhynieecosystem . All of this gives an insight into the sort of ecosystems early plants evolved in.References
ee also
Polysporangiophytes External links
*http://www.palaeos.com/Plants/Rhyniophytes/index.html
*http://www2.ncsu.edu/unity/lockers/project/dendrology/index/plantae/vascular/vascular.html
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