Liverworts

 

Approximately 9000 different species of small, plants Which would be herbaceous known as liverworts exist. They often have a length of less than 10 cm. The majority of them live in a range of environments, including rocks, trees, footpaths, the soil along riverbanks, etc. They can be found all across the world, but the southern rainforests are where they are most common.

Characteristics

  • A liverwort’s dorsoventral thalloid plant body is referred to as a thalloid.
  • Liverworts have flattened leaves that are organized in rows, usually three rows. Because they are leafy and thalloid so frequently coexist endosymbiotically with fungus.
  • The leaves are frequently split or lobed. The edges of the lobes can occasionally be serrated or ciliated as well.
  • Rhizoids are typically hyaline, unicellular, and have thin walls.
  • They differ from the embryophytes because of having oil bodies, a special organelle that is membrane-bound.
  • Liverwort sporophyte setae are parenchymatous. Instead of cell division, these parenchymatous cells enlarge.
  • The cuticles, columella, and stomates that are typically present in mosses and the Hornwort are absent from their capsules.

Classification

The different types of liverworts include:

  • Group of Marchantioid or complicated thalloid and thallose liverworts
  • Leafy or Scaly Liverworts are less common, they almost resemble mosses and small ferns.

Lifecycle

There would be asexual and sexual reproduction.

Asexual Reproduction

Asexual reproduction occurs in liverworts either by thallus fragmentation or through the development of unique structures known as gemmae. These gemmae grow in the gemma cups, which are tiny receptacles found on the plant body or thallus. They are green, multicellular and the type of asexual buds. These components separate from the parent plant’s body and develop into new individuals.

Sexual Reproduction

Usually, the enlargement and spore would divide to create a multicellular protonema marking the beginning of spore germination. While the protonema is reduced to cells in the majority of hornworts and liverworts, it is a highly branching, thread-like structure in mosses. The protonema matures into a plant capable of producing gametes.

The male and female sex organs are generated on either the same or distinct thalli during sexual reproduction. Here, the seta, capsule, and foot evolved from the sporophyte. After meiosis, spores are often formed inside the capsule. A free-living gametophyte develops when these spores germinate. Similar to hornworts, liverworts would be a heteromorphic cycle by having a very short-lived sporophyte that relies on the free-living gametophyte for nourishment.

Liverworts

All plants belong to the kingdom Plantae. They are multicellular, eukaryotic, and autotrophic creatures. A stiff cell wall is present in each plant cell. Chloroplasts and the pigment chlorophyll are present in plants, which are necessary for photosynthesis. Bryophytes, Algae, Pteridophyte, Angiosperms, and also the gymnosperms make up the plant kingdom.

Gross superficial morphological characteristics were used in artificial classification systems, which were mostly based on vegetative characteristics or the androecium structure. Natural affinities among the creatures served as the foundation for natural classification systems, which take into account both internal and exterior characteristics. Based on evolutionary links between distinct animals, phylogenetic classification systems hold that species pertaining to the same taxonomy share a common ancestor. Depending on any and all detectable qualities, numerical taxonomy assigns numbers and codes to each character before processing the data. Based on cytological data such as chromosomal number, structure, and behavior, cytotaxonomy. The chemical components of the plant serve as the foundation for chemotaxonomy.

Bryophytes

The words “Bryon,” which means mosses, and “phyton,” which means plants, are the ancestors of the term “Bryophyta.” Embryophytes like moss, liverworts, and hornworts are categorized as Bryophyta. These would be tiny shrubs that thrive in moist, shaded environments. Vascular bundles are absent. They multiply using spore rather than flower and seed. Bryology has been the study of bryophytes.

  • Plants will grow in moist, shady environments.
  • The core of the flower is thallus-like and either recumbent or upright.
  • Rhizoids, which can be single or multiple, are what holds it to the substratum.
  • They have a root-like, stem-like, and leaves structure but no genuine vegetative structure.
  • There is no vascular system in plants (xylem, phloem)
  • The development of bryophytes alternates between independent gametophytes with sex organs that produce sperm and egg and reliant sporophytes that include the reproductive organs.

Bryophyte gametophytes float with just a flagellum, hence the water content is necessary for fertilization. Additionally, the phylum embryo stays joined to the mother plant, which takes care of and feeds it. Little is visible of the sporophyte that emerges from the embryo. The complex sexually mature structure known as the sporangium, wherein meiosis results in haploid spores, is found in bryophytes but lacking from most algae. Life forms share this trait as well.

Bryophyta is further divided into 3 groups:

  • Mosses
  • Liverworts
  • Hornworts

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