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Encyclopedia > Gymnosperms

Gymnosperms are seed-bearing, vascular plants. The term gymnosperm comes from the Greek word gumnospermos, meaning literally "naked seed". This term is applied because the seeds of these plants are not formed in an enclosed ovulary (that is, a pistil with one or more carpels, developing into a fruit as in the angiosperms), but naked on the scales of a cone or cone-like structure. The production of seeds distinguishes the gymnosperms (along with the angiosperms) from other members of the vascular plants. Gymnosperms are heterosporous, producing microspores that develop into pollen grains and megaspores that are retained in an ovule. After fertilization (joining of the micro- and megaspore), the resulting embryo, along with other cells comprising the ovule, develops into a seed. The seed is a sporophyte resting stage.


At one time, the gymnosperms were considered to be a class (Class Gymnospermae), first within the seed plants (Division Spermatophyta; 1883~1950) and later within the vascular plants (Division Tracheophyta; 1950~1981). The class essentially encompassed the conifers and their allies (by which term is meant "related species of plants"), including several groups of extinct plants known only from fossils. In these earlier classification schemes, the "naked seed" plants were clearly set off from the other classes of higher plants (that is, the ferns and flowering plants), essentially as they are today. However, fossil evidence suggests that the angiosperms evolved from a gymnosperm ancestor, which would make the gymnosperm taxon paraphyletic. Modern cladistics attempts to define taxa that are monophyletic, traceable to a common ancestor and inclusive therefore of all descendants of that common ancestor. So, while the term gymnosperm is still widely used to distinguish the four taxa of non-flowering, seed-bearing plants from the angiosperms, plant species once treated as gymnosperms are distributed among four groups given equal rank as divisions within the Kingdom Plantae. These groups are:


  Results from FactBites:
 
The Gymnosperm Database: Home Page (1355 words)
Welcome to the Gymnosperm Database, the web's premier source of information on conifers and their allies.
For instance, it includes pages on the gymnosperms of Australia, the oldest trees in the world, and accounts of some of my field excursions.
The Gymnosperm Database was established as an online entity in the summer of 1997 and has since grown steadily, getting its own URL (Conifers.org) in the summer of 1999.
In this experiment, the effects of temperature on rate of photosynthesis in gymnosperms and angiosperms was studied ... (942 words)
Since gymnosperm needles remain green and attached to their tree branches in the winter time while angiosperm leaves turn brown, die and fall off of the branches, it was hypothesized that gymnosperms exhibit significantly higher rates of photosynthesis in colder climates than do angiosperms.
In support of the hypothesis, however, the mean rates of photosynthesis for the angiosperm and gymnosperm in the cold climate (which were -.3921 and -2.327 ppm/min/g, respectively) were indeed found to be significantly different; the gymnosperm rate of photosynthesis was significantly greater in cold climate than that of the angiosperm with a p-value of 0.0490.
Perhaps the reason that the gymnosperms maintain their green color in the winter is because of the possibility that they may go dormant in the winter time to conserve energy, much like hibernation; the green color is just the pigment being stored in the plant.
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