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20.5: Marchantiophyta - The Liverworts

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    33883
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    • Gametophyte morphology
      • Leafy liverworts have leaves arranged in a flat plane with a set of smaller underleaves
      • Thalloid liverworts have no leaves
      • Liverwort cells have multiple chloroplasts
      • Simple pores allow for gas exchange (no guard cells, meaning pores are permanently open)
      • Asexual clones, called gemmae, are sometimes produced
    • Sporophyte morphology
      • Leafy liverworts produce single sporangium at the end of a seta (often fragile, transparent)
      • Marchantia, a thalloid liverwort, develops complex structures called where gametangia are produced

    Leafy Liverworts

    Cut off the end of a leafy liverwort and make a wet mount or obtain a prepared slide to view under the compound microscope. Draw the specimen below and indicate the three different rows of leaves (two in one plane, and a row of smaller underleaves running beneath the stem).

    Still under the compound microscope, observe one of the leaf cells. Can you tell how many chloroplasts are in it? Draw this cell in the space below and label the chloroplasts and any other features you recognize.

    Thalloid Liverworts: Marchantia

    If available, observe a Marchantia polymorpha gametophyte under the dissecting scope. Look for simple pores, rhizoids, archegoniophores, antheridiophores, and gemmae cups containing asexual clones of the gametophyte, called gemmae. Label the bolded features in the life cycle diagram.

    Marchantia life cycle:

    clipboard_e5d849f909aa0f2006ada962d86093660.png
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Marchantia life cycle diagram

    In the diagram above, indicate where meiosis and fertilization occur. Color the haploid and diploid tissue differently, and draw arrows to show when mitosis is happening.

    Obtain a prepared slide of a Marchantia antheridiophore. The male gametangia, antheridia, are produced on the top of this structure. Each antheridium produces haploid, swimming sperm by mitosis. Label the bolded features in the life cycle diagram.

    clipboard_e3b8aa3771ab39403a14690aa56dfa612.png
    Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\): Marchantia antheridiophore

    Obtain a prepared slide of an unfertilized Marchantia archegoniophore. This is the structure that produces the female gametangia, archegonia. Each archegonium produces a single haploid egg by mitosis.

    clipboard_e348fc1d30223b6ef2daad18adecf995e.png
    Figure \(\PageIndex{3}\): Marchantia archegniophore

    A sperm will be transported by water to the archegoniophore, travel down the venter of the archegonium, and fertilize the egg. This forms a diploid zygote. Label the bolded features in the life cycle diagram.

    clipboard_e864b4339cf8e6fcdec3390b912cb63bd.png
    Figure \(\PageIndex{4}\): Archegonia close up

    Obtain a prepared slide of a fertilized Marchantia archegoniophore with sporophytes. The zygote will be retained within the archegonium and nourished through the placenta, an area of gametophyte tissue adjacent to the foot of the sporophyte.

    The mature sporophyte produces haploid spores via meiosis, which will grow into gametophytes. The sporophyte has a seta (the stalk), sporangium (also called a capsule), spores, and elaters, which aid in spore dispersal. Label the bolded features in the life cycle diagram.

    clipboard_e5e3f5a7b971d103f98d50f974209097c.png
    Figure \(\PageIndex{5}\): Marchantia sporophyte

    Contributors and Attributions


    20.5: Marchantiophyta - The Liverworts is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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