Rhynia is a single-species genus of Devonian vascular plants. Rhynia gwynne-vaughanii was the sporophyte[2] generation of a vascular, axial, free-sporing diplohaplonticembryophytic land plant of the Early Devonian that had anatomical features more advanced than those of the bryophytes. Rhynia gwynne-vaughanii was a member of a sister group to all other eutracheophytes, including modern vascular plants.
Rhynia is thought to have had deciduous lateral branches, which it used to disperse laterally over the substrate[5][6] and stands of the plant may therefore have been clonal populations.
Evidence of the gametophytegeneration of Rhynia has been described in the form of crowded tufts of diminutive stems only a few mm in height, with the form genus name Remyophyton delicatum.[7] Like those of Aglaophyton major,[8][9]Horneophyton lignieri[10] and Nothia aphylla[11] the gametophytes of Rhynia were dioicous, bearing male and female gametangia (antheridia and archegonia) on different axes. A significant finding is that the axes of the gametophytes were vascular, unlike almost all of the gametophytes of modern pteridophytes except for that of Psilotum.[12]
Taxonomy
Two species of Rhynia were initially described by R. Kidston and W. H. Lang from the Rhynie chert bed: R. gwynne-vaughnii in 1917,[3] and R. major in 1920.[13]R. gwynne-vaughanii was named by Kidston and Lang in honour of their late friend and colleague, the botanist David Thomas Gwynne-Vaughan.[3]
A study of the vascular tissue of the two by David S. Edwards in 1986 lead to the conclusion that the cell walls of the water-conducting cells of R. major lacked the secondary thickening bars seen in the xylem of R. gwynne-vaughanii, and were more like the water-conducting hydroids of moss sporophytes. His conclusion was that R. gwynne-vaughanii belongs in the vascular plants, while R. major belongs among the bryophytes. Accordingly, he transferred it to a new genus Aglaophyton, leaving R. gwynne-vaughnii as the only known species of Rhynia.[14]Rhynia is the type genus for the rhyniophytes, established as the subdivision Rhyniophytina by Banks,[15] but since treated at various ranks.
^Kenrick, P.; Crane, P.R. (1997). The origin and early diversification of land plants : a cladistic study. Washington & London: Smithsonian Institution Press. ISBN978-1-56098-729-1. Fig. 4.8, p. 101.
^Edwards, D.S. (1980). "Evidence for the sporophytic status of the Lower Devonian plant Rhynia gwynne-vaughanii Kidston and Lang". Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology. 29: 177–188. Bibcode:1980RPaPa..29..177E. doi:10.1016/0034-6667(80)90057-3.
^Edwards, D.S. (1986). "Aglaophyton major, a non-vascular land-plant from the Devonian Rhynie chert". Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society. 93 (2): 173–204. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8339.1986.tb01020.x.
^Bateman, R.M.; Crane, P.R.; Dimichele, W.A.; Kenrick, P.R.; Rowe, N.P.; Speck, T.; Stein, W.E. (1998). "Early Evolution of Land Plants: Phylogeny, Physiology, and Ecology of the Primary Terrestrial Radiation". Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics. 29 (1): 263–292. doi:10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.29.1.263.
^Edwards, D.S. (1980). "Evidence for the sporophyte status of the Lower Devonian plant Rhynia gwynne-vaughnii Kidston and Lang". Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology. 29: 177–188. Bibcode:1980RPaPa..29..177E. doi:10.1016/0034-6667(80)90057-3.
^H. Kerp, N.H. Trewin and H. Hass (2004) New gametophytes from the Early Devonian Rhynie chert. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Earth Sciences, 94, 411–428
^Remy, W.; Hass, H. (1996). "New information on gametophytes and sporophytes of Aglaophyton major and inferences about possible environmental adaptations". Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology. 90 (3–4): 175–193. Bibcode:1996RPaPa..90..175R. doi:10.1016/0034-6667(95)00082-8.
^Remy, W.; Remy, R (1980). "Lyonophyton rhyniensis n. gen. et nov. spec., ein Gametophyt aus dem Chert von Rhynie (Unterdevon,Schottland)". Argumenta Palaeobotanica. 6: 37–72.
^Remy, W.; Hass, H. (1991a). "Langiophyton mackiei nov. gen., nov. spec., ein Gametophyt mit Archegoniophoren aus dem Chert von Rhynie (Unterdevon Schottland)". Argumenta Palaeobotanica. 8: 69–117.
^Remy, W.; Hass, H. (1991b). "Kidstonophyton discoides nov. gen. nov. spec., ein Gametophyt aus dem Chert von Rhynie (Unterdevon, Schottland". Argumenta Palaeobotanica. 8: 29–45.
^Holloway, J.E. (1939). "The gametophyte, embryo and young rhizome of Psilotum triquetrum Schwarz". Annals of Botany. 3 (2): 313–336. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.aob.a085063.
^Edwards, David S. (1986). "Aglaophyton major, a non-vascular land-plant from the Devonian Rhynie Chert". Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society. 93 (2): 173–204. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8339.1986.tb01020.x.