Devonian Plant Evolution

From Paleos

The development of plant root depth during the Devonian period marked a major shift in plant evolution and terrestrial ecosystems. Early Devonian plants such as the rhyniophytes, zosterophyllophytes and lycophytes have features such as vascular tissue, stomata, a cuticle to protect against drying, rhizoids, and sporangia at the tips of short lateral branches instead of terminal as in Cooksonia. These forms were small, non-rooted or shallowly rooted, lacked woody tissue and hence were unable to grow beyond the height of small bushes. These plants reproduced by means of spores, which requires a moist habitat. They were therefore confined to moist, lowland habitats, thus having little effect on their physical environment

The first shrub and tree-like plants, such as Progymnosperms and lycopsids, had evolved by the middle Devonian. By the late Devonian the first real trees, such as Archaeopteris ("ancient fern" - not to be confused with Archaeopteryx, "ancient wing", the first bird!), had appeared. Trees have special vascular systems to allow for water circulation and nutrient flow against the pull of gravity. At the very end of the Devonian seed-bearing (gymnosperm) plants appeared for the first time, breaking free of the dependence on moisture that limits spore-bearing (pteridophyte) plants. Along with these developments came the development of advanced root systems and the production of soils, increased weathering, and huge ecological feedback.

The black & white figure shows the increasing terrestrial plant root depth penetration with time during the Devonian, leading to increasing soil depth and weathering. "Rhyniophytes" are a basal radiation of land plants such as Aglaophyton or Horneophyton. Trimerophytes include such plants as Psilophyton. Lycophytes arrived in the Middle Devoinian. They originally appeared as low-lying herbaceous forms, such as Asteroxylon or Drepanophycus. Tree-sized lycopods (e.g., Lepidosigillaria and Cyclostigma) appeared by the end of the Middle Devonian. Progymnosperms, such as Tetraxylopteris, arose in the Frasnian. By the Famennian, Archaeopteris forests are common. At the very end of the Devonian, Archaeopteris is found together with early gymnosperms, such as Elkinsia and Moresnetia, and zygopierid ferns such as Rhacophyton.

The Carboniferous Period

Despite the origin of the seed habit, the majority of Carboniferous plants reproduced by spores. The moist swampy environments of the time provided a nurturing environment. Lycophytes (scale trees and club mosses), which had evolved as small plants during the late Silurian? or early Devonian, and diversified greatly during the succeeding Devonian period, continued and thrived throughout the Carboniferous, but being dependent on water and moist conditions, most died out with the increasing aridity at the end of the Paleozoic, only a few small ones making it through. Calamites and ferns were other spore-bearing plants that appeared during the Devonian and flourished during the following Carboniferous period.

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