Novel conducting tissues in Lower Devonian plants |
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Authors: | D EDWARDS L AXE |
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Institution: | Department of Earth Sciences, Cardiff University, P.O. Box 914, Cardiff CF10 3 YE |
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Abstract: | Elongate cells presumed to comprise water-conducting tissues are described from the central regions of short lengths of two naked, stomatiferous, coalified, axial fossils from Lochkovian (Lower Devonian) fluvial rocks in the Welsh Borderland. In one, a discrete central strand is predominantly composed of uniformly thickened cells that are compared with central tissues in coeval plants, e.g. Aglaophyton , and the hydroids of extant mosses. The other has at least two types of cells with pits of plasmodesmata dimensions that perforate only the inner layer of a bilayered wall. These are compared with liverwort and Takakia hydroids and the coeval S-type tracheids that characterize the Rhyniopsida. The affinities of the two axes remain equivocal. The relevance of plasmodesmata-derived pits to the evolution of diversity in water-conducting elements in early cmbryophytes is discussed. |
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Keywords: | bryophytes hydroids leptoids plasmodesmata tracheids |
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