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  2. Psilophyton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilophyton

    A central strand of xylem occupied up to a third of the diameter of the stem. In the lower parts of main stems it was circular, enlarging before it divided prior to dichotomous branching. Higher up it became elliptical in cross-section, corresponding to the two rows of fertile branching units.

  3. Psilotum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilotum

    Psilotum is a genus of fern-like vascular plants.It is one of two genera in the family Psilotaceae commonly known as whisk ferns, the other being Tmesipteris.Plants in these two genera were once thought to be descended from the earliest surviving vascular plants, but more recent phylogenies place them as basal ferns, as a sister group to Ophioglossales.

  4. Psilotum complanatum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilotum_complanatum

    The scales are arranged in two rows along the flat stems and branches. The stems are broadly triangular in cross section and 5 mm wide. The branches are 1.5 to 2 mm wide. P. complanatum grows 10 to 75 cm long and stems branch in pairs a number of times up their length and are covered with brownish colored hair-like rhizoids.

  5. Psilotum nudum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psilotum_nudum

    Psilotum nudum, the whisk fern, [3] is a fernlike plant. Like the other species in the order Psilotales, it lacks roots. [4]Its name, Psilotum nudum, means "bare naked" in Latin, because it lacks (or seems to lack) most of the organs of typical vascular plants, as a result of evolutionary reduction.

  6. Sporophyll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sporophyll

    Psilotum has been interpreted as producing sporangia (fused in a synangium) on the terminus of a stem. Equisetum always produce strobili, but the structures bearing sporangia (sporangiophores) have been interpreted as modified stems. The sporangia, despite being recurved are interpreted as terminal.

  7. Microphylls and megaphylls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microphylls_and_megaphylls

    In plant anatomy and evolution a microphyll (or lycophyll) is a type of plant leaf with one single, unbranched leaf vein. [1] Plants with microphyll leaves occur early in the fossil record, and few such plants exist today. In the classical concept of a microphyll, the leaf vein emerges from the protostele without leaving a leaf gap. Leaf gaps ...

  8. Stele (biology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stele_(biology)

    In a vascular plant, the stele is the central part of the root or stem [1] containing the tissues derived from the procambium. These include vascular tissue, in some cases ground tissue and a pericycle, which, if present, defines the outermost boundary of the stele.

  9. Equisetidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equisetidae

    Vegetative stem: N = node, I = internode, B = branch in whorl, L = fused microphylls Cross-section through a strobilus; sporangiophores, with attached sporangia (spore capsules) full of spores, can be discerned. Strobilus of E. braunii, terminal on an unbranched stem