Love is Spore
I suspect that by now most of you will have purchased your very own
tree fern and are falling madly in love with it. Of course, if you’re a university student like I am, you will know that money doesn’t grow on tree ferns. If you want to collect spores and grow your own for free, then you need to understand the life cycle of a
tree fern.
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A. Mature Sporophyte producing spores from its Sporangia B. Mature Gametophyte C. Young Sporophyte https://www.flickr.com/photos/internetarchivebookimages/20219695479/ viewed on 15/3/2018 |
Before we get into the juicy details of tree fern reproduction,
there are some terms we need to understand. A sperm and an egg are called "haploids" because
they each contain only one set of unpaired chromosome. Once the two merge to become a zygote, it is called a diploid; it contains two sets of chromosomes (Campbell et al., 2008). The terms “haploid" and "diploid” are
important, so take a moment to let their roots establish.
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A young Sporophyte https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Onoclea_sensibilis_4_crop.jpg viewed on 15/3/2018 |
Tree ferns have “Alternative Generations” meaning they have a haploid generation and a diploid generation. If we start at fertilisation, we start in the
diploid part. The diploid zygote develops into the frond part of the tree fern, this is called a sporophyte (Large
& Braggins, 2004). The Mature sporophyte is what you are familiar with
when you think of a tree fern. Eventually, underneath the fronds of a mature plant (A mature
sporophyte), sacks called Sporangia
will develop (Large
& Braggins, 2004). The sporangium is where cell division or “Meiosis” takes
place and it is at this point that we begin the haploid part of the life cycle.
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A young Gametophyte https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Fern_young_gametophyte.jpg viewed on 15/3/2018 |
Now that you know how tree ferns reproduce,
you best believe that you have no excuse.
Pack a sandwich, some snacks and a bottle of juice.
Go find a tree fern, put this knowledge to use!
you best believe that you have no excuse.
Pack a sandwich, some snacks and a bottle of juice.
Go find a tree fern, put this knowledge to use!
Reference List
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Tree Fern Sporangia https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tree_Fern_Spores.jpg viewed on 15/3/2018 |
Jones, D.L. & Clemesha, S.C.C 1989, Australian Ferns and Fern Allies, The Currawong Press, 2 Aquatic Drive Frenchs Forest NSW 2086
Large, M.F. & Braggins, J.E. 2004, Tree ferns, CSIRO Publishing, Collingwood, Victoria.
An interesting post about the fern’s life cycle. I was wondering if there is any particular difference in how tree ferns reproduce and how other ground-dwelling ferns reproduce?
ReplyDeleteHi Tasmin. The reproductive methods by which tree ferns reproduce is no different to that of the ground fern. Interestingly, The trunk does not even offer any advantage in spore dispersal over ground ferns apparently.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the thought provoking question.
Dale Perkins