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Explore the intricacies of the fern life cycle, a process involving two generations - the diploid sporophyte and haploid gametophyte. Learn about spore production, fertilization, and the growth of a new sporophyte. Discover how this process is common in mosses, liverworts, horsetails, lycophytes, and ferns.
Typology: Study notes
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All non-seed plants reproduce from spores with an alternation of generations, an unfamiliar concept to most
Starting on the lower left of the diagram, the regular fern plant is the sporophyte with fronds
The arrow above shows a leaf segment or pinna with spore clusters or sori underneath. The next arrow points to a single sorus with sporangia in magnified view
The arrows issuing from the prothallus show an antheridium producing sperm and an archegonium with an egg. These are located on the bottom of the prothallus. The sperm swims through water to fertilize the egg.
Once the egg has been fertilized it grows into a baby fern sporophyte on the prothallus, which soon withers as the new fern plant develops. In real life, here is an old fern sporophyte of leather fern with many fronds.
Here are young sori; notice the several egglike sporangia in each sorus, each is capable of producing many spores. The immature sporangia are pale yellow while, in the next slide…
…the sporangia have turned brown and are mature. Notice the sori are not a single structure, as appears to the eye from a distance, but instead a dense cluster of spore bodies or sporangia
Prothalli are the size of a thumb nail and heart shaped. This one has been turned upside down so you can see the sexual organs underneath (the dark purple spots). The male organs or antheridia produce sperm when there’s water present
Underneath the prothallus lie many globe-shaped structures known as antheridia
Here you see the necks of the fern archegonia
At the bottom of the photo lies the prothallus and growing out of it, a tiny new fern sporophyte with its first frond. It will take a year or more before the new plant makes its own sori.