{"id":63915,"date":"2020-09-28T22:30:00","date_gmt":"2020-09-29T06:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/club-mosses-and-the-evolution-of-land-plants\/"},"modified":"2020-09-28T22:30:00","modified_gmt":"2020-09-29T06:30:00","slug":"club-mosses-and-the-evolution-of-land-plants","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/club-mosses-and-the-evolution-of-land-plants\/","title":{"rendered":"Club mosses and the evolution of land plants"},"content":{"rendered":"
By Mary F. Willson<\/strong><\/ins><\/p>\n For the Juneau Empire<\/em><\/ins><\/p>\n On a recent walk near Echo Cove, I noticed a lovely patch of a club moss sporting dozens of erect spore-bearing “cones.” We have several types of club moss here, but the only one I recognize (so far) is Lycopodium clavatum or running club moss. It often has long stems that are covered with short leaves, and they “run” over the ground before making erect branches that bear cones on stalks. Despite their common name, club mosses are not mosses at all; they are on a different branch of the evolutionary tree.<\/p>\n I knew that they originated a long time ago, although they were not the first plants to live on land. But seeing this modern specimen made me think about the evolution of early land plants and the problems that attend a change from an aquatic to a terrestrial environment.<\/p>\n The first land plants belonged to a group of green algae (called Charophyta), some of which became terrestrial perhaps 500 million years ago. It is not clear why they did so, although some researchers suggest that land-living allowed escape from various alga-eaters in the water. But land-living meant that these early colonists risked desiccation: both the plant and its spores had to be protected from drying. This could be done in two basic ways: avoid the problem by growing and producing spores only in wet conditions, or develop water-impervious layers around the plant and its spores. Furthermore, although they were already able to photosynthesize carbohydrates (from carbon dioxide and water), now they had to get the necessary carbon dioxide in a gaseous form, from air. Most of the early land plants were very thin, often only one cell thick, so gases could readily diffuse in and out.<\/p>\n The first non-algal land plants were liverworts and mosses, appearing roughly 450 million years ago. These plants grow close to the ground or other surface, seldom extending upward more than a few centimeters. Although they live on land, they need at least a film of water for reproduction: sperm have to swim to reach eggs to fertilize. They occupy two branches of the evolutionary tree that are adjacent to each other but totally separate from the branch that leads to all other living land plants.<\/p>\n