Embryophyte
| Embryophytes | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scientific classification | ||||||
| ||||||
| Divisions | ||||||
|
Complex nonvascular plants
Bryophyta - mosses Hepatophyta - liverworts Anthocerophyta - hornworts Vascular plants Seedless Psilotophyta - whisk ferns Lycopodiophyta - club mosses Equisetophyta - horsetails Ophioglossophyta Pteridophyta - ferns Seeded Pinophyta - conifers Cycadophyta - cycads Ginkgophyta - ginkgo Gnetophyta - Gnetae Magnoliophyta - flowering plants | ||||||
The embryophytes is a grouping of plants, and indeed the word "plant" is often used as a synonym for embryophytes. An embryophyte is any member of the group. Trees, flowers, ferns, mosses, and many others are included in this grouping. Embryophytes are differentiated from green algae—from which they apparently originated—in being exclusively multicellular and having reproductive organs containing both reproductive and sterile tissues. Most embryophytes are adapted for life on land; most aquatic embryophyte species evolved from terrestrial ancestors.
Embryophytes first appeared on earth during the Palaeozoic Era. These forms showed an "alternation of generations" between haploid and diploid phases, respectively called the gametophyte and the sporophyte. Unlike similar algae, the sporophyte was very different in shape and function: remaining small and dependent on its parent for its entire brief life. Plants at this level of organization, collectively called bryophytes, include:
- Division Bryophyta (mosses)
- Division Anthocerotophyta (hornworts)
- Division Hepaticophyta (liverworts)
- Division Lycopodiophyta (clubmosses)
- Division Equisetophyta (horsetails)
- Division Psilotophyta (whisk ferns)
- Division Ophioglossophyta (adders-tongues and grape-ferns)
- Division Pteridophyta (ferns)
- Division Cycadophyta (Cycads)
- Division Ginkgophyta (Ginkgo)
- Division Pinophyta (Conifers, Coniferophyta)
- Division Gnetophyta (Gnetae)
- Division Magnoliophyta (Flowering plants, Anthophyta)