4.8 Article

A fossil record of land plant origins from charophyte algae

Journal

SCIENCE
Volume 373, Issue 6556, Pages 792-+

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AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.abj2927

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The discovery of an assemblage containing elements from the early Ordovician period sheds light on the evolutionary continuity between embryophytes and their algal ancestors, providing new insights into the origins and changes of terrestrial plants.
Molecular time trees indicating that embryophytes originated around 500 million years ago (Ma) during the Cambrian are at odds with the record of fossil plants, which first appear in the mid-Silurian almost 80 million years later. This time gap has been attributed to a missing fossil plant record, but that attribution belies the case for fossil spores. Here, we describe a Tremadocian (Early Ordovician, about 480 Ma) assemblage with elements of both Cambrian and younger embryophyte spores that provides a new level of evolutionary continuity between embryophytes and their algal ancestors. This finding suggests that the molecular phylogenetic signal retains a latent evolutionary history of the acquisition of the embryophytic developmental genome, a history that perhaps began during Ediacaran-Cambrian time but was not completed until the mid-Silurian (about 430 Ma).

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