Listing 1 - 10 from 44 for club mosses
Division Lycophyta
... leaves) are also characters. There are no tree-like forms in extant species. The term, club mosses, is used for the Order Lycopodiales or just for the Genus, Lycopodium. The genus is ...
home.manhattan.edu
Geological Time Map
Geological Time Map Paleozoic Era Later Devonian Period 375 million years ago A forest in later Devonian time: precursors of the ferns, horsetails and club mosses. Continue geological time map
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Pteridophytes - Introduction
... to the seed plants. Let's look at the main groups of Pteridophytes! Ferns Club mosses Spike mosses Horsetails This is a giant Caribbean tree fern, Cyathea arborea but most ferns are small ... still clustered together as one land mass!) had a warm, tropical climate. These giant club mosses and spike mosses and horsetails thrived in the vast swamps that stretched throughout this landscape. Click on ...
scitec.uwichill.edu.bb
Fern & Fern Allies Lab
... on the side bench. Familiarise yourself with these plants. B. THE FERN ALIES I. Club & Spike mosses Club mosses grow wild in the wetter parts of Barbados. They are, nonetheless, a relic group of ...
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Exam #1 Hints
... Kingdom Plantae Nonvascular Plants: No water-conducting cells (xylem). 1. Division Bryophyta (mosses and liverworts). Vascular plants: Xylem tissue, true roots, stems & leaves. [The ... Spores but no seeds 2. Division Psilophyta (Psilotum or whisk fern. 3. Division Lycophyta (club mosses). 4. Division Sphenophyta (horsetails). 5. Division Pterophyta (ferns). Spermatophytes: Seed Plants Gymnosperms ...
waynesword.palomar.edu
Biology, biology degrees, research U.W.A. - Institute of Biological Sciences
... . Tropical house Within the Tropical House is a wide diversity of plant species, including Lycophyta (club mosses), ferns (around ten species), cycads, forty or so species of Cacti and succulents, a banana ...
www.aber.ac.uk
Lecture 4 Links
... Biology 102 Plants, People and the Environment Links of the Day: Lecture 4. Invasion: Mosses and ferns. We start this week with defining the major differences between plants and ... life cycle, biology, and evolution), Psilophyta ("whisk ferns" - life cycle, biology, nice images), Lycophyta ("club mosses"), Sphenophyta ("horsetails"). To learn more about the economic or aboriginal uses of ferns, check ...
www.biosci.ohio-state.edu
untitled
... . Bearing strobiles. STROBILE: 1. A cone-like structure of sporophylls, as in the horsetails and club mosses. 2. A gymnosperm cone or a hop inflorescence. STOBILOID: Resembling or relating to a strobile ... on an organ, especially at one side of the base of the capsule in many mosses. STRUMOSE: Bearing a struma. STUNT: To retard or stop plant growth, usually by accident through ...
www.botany.com
LIVING FOSSILS AT PALOMAR COLLEGE
... positioning of the continents was different. Spore-bearing plants (pteridophytes), such as ferns, horsetails (sphenophytes), club-mosses (lycophytes) and whisk ferns (psilophytes) were abundant in the forest understory. Some of these ancient ...
waynesword.palomar.edu
Open Directory - Science:Biology:Flora and Fauna:Plantae:Pteridophyta
... : Biology: Flora_and_Fauna: Plantae: Pteridophyta For sites about both ferns (Polypodiophyta) and their allies: horsetails (Equisetophyta), club mosses (Lycopodiophyta), and whisk-ferns (Psilotophyta). Open Directory Home: Gardening: Plants: Ferns Copyright © 1998-2005 Netscape ...
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