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16.3C: Fern Life Cycle

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    5790
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    Ther are over 10,000 species of ferns. Most are found in the tropics where tree ferns with their above-ground stems may grow as high as 40 feet. In temperate regions, the stems of ferns called rhizome grow underground. The leaves called fronds grow up from the rhizome each spring.

    Alternation of Generations

    The Sporophyte Generation

    alt
    Figure 16.3.3.1 Fern life cycle

    The plant we recognize as a fern is the diploid sporophyte generation. Sori form on the fronds. Each contains many sporangia mounted on stalks. Within each sporangium, the spore mother cells undergo meiosis producing four haploid spores each.

    When the humidity drops,

    • The thin-walled lip cells of each sporangium separate.
    • The annulus slowly straightens out.
    • Then the annulus snaps forward expelling the spores.
    alt
    Figure 16.3.3.2 Sori on a fern leaflet


    The photo shows the sori on the underside of the leaflets of Polystichum acrostichoides, the Christmas fern.

    The Gametophyte Generation

    If a spore is blown to a suitable moist location, it germinates into a filament of cells. This may grow into a prothallus with

    1. rhizoids, which absorb water and minerals from the soil,
    2. archegonia, which produce a single egg (by mitosis) or
    3. antheridia, which form swimming sperm (again, by mitosis) or
    4. both.

    Fertilization

    If moisture is plentiful, the sperm swim to archegonia - usually on another prothallus because the two kinds of sex organs generally do not mature at the same time on a single prothallus. Another method for promoting cross-fertilization: The first spores to germinate develop into prothallia with archegonia. These prothallia secrete a gibberellin into their surroundings. This is absorbed by younger prothallia and causes them to produce antheridia exclusively. Fertilization restores the diploid number and begins a new sporophyte generation. The embryo sporophyte develops a foot that penetrates the tissue of the prothallus and enables the sporophyte to secure nourishment until it becomes self-sufficient. Although it is tiny, the haploid fern prothallus is a fully-independent, autotrophic plant.

    Contributors and Attributions


    This page titled 16.3C: Fern Life Cycle is shared under a CC BY 3.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by John W. Kimball via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform; a detailed edit history is available upon request.