A review of the fossil record coupled with insights gained from molecular and developmental biology reveal a series of body plan transformations that gave rise to the first land plants. Across diverse algal clades, including the green algae and their descendants, the plant body plan underwent a unicellular colonial simple multicellular → complex multicellular transformation series. The colonization of land involved increasing body size and associated cell specialization, including cells capable of hydraulic transport. The evolution of the life-cycle that characterizes all known land plant species involved a divergence in body plan phenotypes between the haploid and diploid generations, one adapted to facilitate sexual reproduction (a free-water dependent gametophyte) and another adapted to the dissemination of spores (a more water-independent sporophyte). The amplification of this phenotypic divergence, combined with indeterminate growth in body size, resulted in a desiccation-adapted branched sporophyte with a cuticularized epidermis, stomates, and vascular tissues. Throughout the evolution of the land plants, the body plans of the sporophyte generation involved "axiation,"i.e., the acquisition of a cylindrical geometry and subsequent organographic specializations.
CITATION STYLE
Niklas, K. J., & Tiffney, B. H. (2023). Viridiplantae Body Plans Viewed Through the Lens of the Fossil Record and Molecular Biology. Integrative and Comparative Biology, 63(6), 1316–1330. https://doi.org/10.1093/icb/icac150
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