Progymnosperm

The progymnosperms are an extinct group of woody, spore-bearing plants that is presumed to have evolved from the trimerophytes, and eventually gave rise to the spermatophytes, ancestral to both gymnosperms and angiosperms (flowering plants). They have been treated formally at the rank of division Progymnospermophyta or class Progymnospermopsida (as opposite). The stratigraphically oldest known examples belong to the Middle Devonian order the Aneurophytales, with forms such as Protopteridium, in which the vegetative organs consisted of relatively loose clusters of axes. Tetraxylopteris is another example of a genus lacking leaves. In more advanced aneurophytaleans such as Aneurophyton these vegetative organs started to look rather more like fronds, and eventually during Late Devonian times the aneurophytaleans are presumed to have given rise to the pteridosperm order, the Lyginopteridales. In Late Devonian times, another group of progymnosperms gave rise to the first really large trees known as Archaeopteris. The latest surviving group of progymnosperms is the Noeggerathiales, which persisted until the end of the Permian.

Other characteristics:

Phylogeny

Progymnosperms are a paraphyletic grade of plants.

Tracheophyta

Rhyniopsida

Lycopodiophytina (Clubmosses, Spikemosses & Quillworts)

Eophyllophyton

Trimerophytopsida

Moniliformopses

Polypodiophytina (Ferns)

Radiatopses

Pertica

Lignophytes

†Aneurophytopsida

Metalignophytes

†Protopityales Nemejc 1963

Archaeopteridales

Noeggerathiales Nemejc emend. J. Wang et al. 2021

Spermatophytina (Seed plants)

Progymnosperms

References


Uses material from the Wikipedia article Progymnosperm, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.