CHAPTER 21: Ferns
In this chapter you will learn about
a brief review of the
features that distinguish the major groups of vascular plants without seeds from
one another and from the bryophytes and then discusses representatives of each
Phylum. Included in the discussion are whisk ferns (Psilotum), club
mosses (Lycopodium, Selaginella),
horsetails (Equisetum), and ferns. A digest of the human and ecological
relevance of each group is given, and life cycles of representatives are
illustrated.
At the end of this chapter the successful student will be able to
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- The Whisk Ferns
- Loosely resemble small, green whisk brooms.
- Structure and Form
- Sporophytes consist almost entirely of dichotomously forking aerial
stems.
- Have neither leaves nor roots.
- Enations spirally arranged along stems.
- Life Cycle:

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- Ground Pines, Spike Mosses, and Quillworts
- Collectively called club mosses.
- Sporophytes have microphylls.
- Have true roots and stems.
- Lycopodium - Ground Pines
- Often grow on forest floors.
- Resemble little Christmas trees, complete with cones.
- Stems are simple or branched.
- Develop from branching rhizomes.
- Life Cycle:

- Selaginella - Spike Mosses
- Especially abundant in tropics.
- Branch more freely than ground pines.
- Leaves have a ligule on upper surface.
- Produce two different kinds of spores and gametophytes (heterospory).
- Life Cycle:

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- Recognize the characteristics of the
species Horsetails and Scouring Rushes
- Structure and Form
- About 25 species scattered through all continents.
- Significant silica deposits accumulate on the inner walls of the
stem’s epidermal cells.
- Branches, when present, are normally in whorls at regular intervals
along the jointed stems.
- Both branched and unbranched species have tiny microphylls in whorls at
the nodes.
- Leaves fused at their base forming a collar.
- Stems are distinctly ribbed and have obvious nodes and internodes.
- Pith breaks down at maturity leaving a hollow central canal.
- Aerial stems develop from horizontal rhizomes.
- Lifecycle:

- Human and Ecological Relevance
- Many giant horsetails used for food.
- Scouring rush stems used for scouring and sharpening
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Last modified:
October 08, 2004 by
Cynthia Herbrandson
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