Top Banner
Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros - INDRESH KUMAR PANDEY
21

Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

Apr 29, 2022

Download

Documents

dariahiddleston
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

Morphology, Anatomy and

Reproduction of Anthoceros

- INDRESH KUMAR PANDEY

Page 2: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

Taxonomic Position of Anthoceros

Class- Anthocerotopsida

Anthocerotales Single order

Two families

Anthocerotaceae Notothylaceae

Representative

Genus Anthoceros Notothylus

Page 3: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

General features of Anthocerotopsida

• Forms an isolated evolutionary line

• Sometimes considered independent from Bryophytes and placed in division Anthocerophyta

• Called as Hornworts due to horn like structure of sporophyte

• Commonly recognised genera includes

Anthoceros, Megaceros, Nothothylus,

Dendroceros

Page 4: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

Anthoceros :Habitat & Distribution

• Cosmopolitan

• Mainly in temperate & tropical regions

• More than 200 species, 25 sp. Recorded from India.

• Mostly grows in moist shady places, sides of ditches or in moist hollows among rocks

• Few species grow on decaying wood.

• Three common Indian species- A. erectus,

A. crispulus, A. himalayensis

Page 5: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

Anthoceros: Morphology

Dorsal surface Ventral surface Rhizoids

(smooth walled)

Thallus showing tubers

Page 6: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros
Page 7: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros
Page 8: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

External features

• Thallus (gametophyte)- small, dark green, dorsiventral,

prostrate, branched or lobed

• No midrib, spongy due to presence of underlying

mucilaginous ducts

• Dorsal surface varies from species to species

Smooth- A. laevis

Velvety- A. crispulus

Rough- A. fusiformis

• Smooth walled rhizoid on ventral surface

• Rounded bluish green thickened area on ventral surface-

Nostoc colonies

Page 9: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

Internal structure

Vertical Transverse Section- Diagrammatic

Vertical Transverse Section- Cellular

Page 10: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

Internal Structure

• Simple, without cellular differentiation

• 1-6 chloroplast per cell, oval or discoid with

lamellar structure like higher plants

• Chloroplast contains pyrenoids, like green

algae, Isoetes and Selaginella

• Nostoc gain entry from slime pores

Page 11: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

Vegetative Reproduction

Page 12: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

Apical Growth

• By single apical cell or group of cells

• Campbell(1918)- difficult to determine

• Leitgeb(1879)- by group of cells

• Mehra & Handoo(1953)- by group of cells in

A. erectus & A. himalayensis

Page 13: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

Development of Antheridium

Page 14: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

Development of Archegonium

Page 15: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

FERTILIZATION

Page 16: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

Morphology of Sporophyte

Page 17: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

Detailed structure of Sporophyte

Page 18: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

Development of Sporophyte

Page 19: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

Structure of Sporophyte

Page 20: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

Spore germination

Page 21: Morphology, Anatomy and Reproduction of Anthoceros

Life cycle of Anthoceros