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Isoetes
Isoetes Temporal range:
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Isoetes tegetiformans with U.S. penny for scale | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Tracheophytes |
Clade: | Lycophytes |
Class: | Lycopodiopsida |
Order: | Isoetales |
Family: | Isoetaceae |
Genus: |
Isoetes L. |
Species | |
See text |
Isoetes, commonly known as the quillworts, is a genus of lycopod. It is the only living genus in the family Isoetaceae and order Isoetales. There are currently 192 recognized species, with a cosmopolitan distribution mostly in aquatic habitats but with the individual species often scarce to rare. Some botanists split the genus, separating two South American species into the genus Stylites, although molecular data place these species among other species of Isoetes, so that Stylites does not warrant taxonomic recognition. Species of Isoetes virtually identical to modern forms have existed since the Jurassic epoch.
The name of the genus may also be spelled Isoëtes. The diaeresis (two dots over the e) indicates that the o and the e are to be pronounced in two distinct syllables. Including this in print is optional; either spelling (Isoetes or Isoëtes) is correct.
Description
Quillworts are mostly aquatic or semi-aquatic in clear ponds and slow-moving streams, though several (e.g. I. butleri, I. histrix and I. nuttallii) grow on wet ground that dries out in the summer. The quillworts are spore-producing plants and highly reliant on water dispersion. Quillworts have different ways to spread their spores based on the environment. Quillwort leaves are hollow and quill-like, with a minute ligule at the base of the upper surface. arising from a central corm. The sporangia are sunk deeply in the leaf bases. Each leaf will either have many small spores or fewer large spores. Both types of leaf are found on each plant. Each leaf is narrow, 2–20 centimetres (0.8–8 in) long (exceptionally up to 100 cm or 40 in) and 0.5–3.0 mm (0.02–0.12 in) wide; they can be either evergreen, winter deciduous, or dry-season deciduous. Only 4% of total biomass, the tips of the leaves, is chlorophyllous.
The roots broaden to a swollen base up to 5 mm (0.2 in) wide where they attach in clusters to a bulb-like, underground rhizome characteristic of most quillwort species, though a few (e.g. I. tegetiformans) form spreading mats. This swollen base also contains male and female sporangia, protected by a thin, transparent covering (velum), which is used diagnostically to help identify quillwort species. They are heterosporous. Quillwort species are very difficult to distinguish by general appearance. The best way to identify them is by examining their megaspores under a microscope. Moreover, habitat, texture, spore size, and velum provide features that distinguish Isoëtes taxa. They also possess a vestigial form of secondary growth in the basal portions of its cormlike stem, an indication that they evolved from larger ancestors.
Biochemistry and genetics
Quillworts use Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) for carbon fixation. Some aquatic species don't have stomata and the leaves have a thick cuticle which prevents CO2 uptake, a task that is performed by their hollow roots instead, which absorb CO2 from the sediment. This has been studied extensively in Isoetes andicola.CAM is normally considered an adaptation to life in arid environments to prevent water loss with the plants opening their stomata at night rather than in the heat of the day. This allows CO2 to enter and minimises water loss. As mostly submerged aquatic plants, quillworts do not lack water and the use of CAM is considered to avoid competition with other aquatic plants for CO2 during daytime.
The first detailed quillwort genome sequence, of I. taiwanensis, showed that there were differences from CAM in terrestrial plants. CAM involves the enzyme phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPC) and plants have two forms of the enzyme. One is normally involved in photosynthesis and the other in central metabolism. From the genome sequence, it appears that in quillworts, both forms are involved in photosynthesis. In addition, the time of day of the peak abundance of some of the components of CAM was different from terrestrial plants. These fundamental differences in biochemistry suggests that CAM in quillworts is probably another example of convergent evolution of CAM during the more than 300 million years since the genus diverged from other plants. However, they may also be because of differences between life in water and in the air. The genome sequence also provided two insights into its structure. First, genes and repeated non-coding regions were fairly evenly distributed across all the chromosomes. This is similar to genomes of other non-seed plants, but different from the seed plants (angiosperms) where there are distinctly more genes at the ends of chromosomes. Secondly, there was also evidence that the whole genome had been duplicated in the ancient past.
Taxonomy
Compared to other genera, Isoetes is poorly known. The first critical monograph on their taxonomy, written by Norma Etta Pfeiffer, was published in 1922 and remained a standard reference into the twenty-first century. Even after studies with cytology, scanning electron microscopy, and chromatography, species are difficult to identify and their phylogeny is disputed. Vegetative characteristics commonly used to distinguish other genera, such as leaf length, rigidity, color, or shape are variable and depend on the habitat. Most classification systems for Isoetes rely on spore characteristics, which make species identification nearly impossible without microscopy.
Reproduction
Overview
Like all land plants, Isoetes undergoes an alternation of generations between a diploid sporophyte stage and a sexual haploid gametophyte stage. However, the dominance of one stage over the other has shifted over time. The development of vascular tissue and subsequent diversification of land plants coincides with the increased dominance of the sporophyte and reduction of the gametophyte. Isoetes, as members of the Lycopodiopsida class, are part of the oldest extant lineage that reflects this shift to a sporophyte dominant lifecycle. In closely related lineages, such as the extinct Lepidodendron, spores were dispersed by the sporophyte through large collections of sporangia called strobili for wind-based spore dispersal. However, Isoetes are small heterosporous semi-aquatic plants, with different reproductive needs and challenges than large tree-like land plants.
Description
Like the rest of the Lycopodiopsida class, Isoetes reproduces with spores. Among the lycophytes, both Isoetes and the Selaginellaceae (spikemosses) are heterosporous, while the remaining lycophyte family Lycopodiaceae (clubmosses) is homosporous. As heterosporous plants, fertile Isoetes sporophytes produce megaspores and microspores, which develop in the megasporangia and microsporangia. These spores are highly ornate and are the primary way by which species are identified, although no one functional purpose of the intricate surface patterns is agreed upon. The megasporangia occur within the outermost microphylls (single-veined leaves) of the plant while the microsporangia are found in the innermost microphylls. This pattern of development is hypothesized to improve the dispersal of the heavier megaspore. These spores then germinate and divide into mega- and micro- gametophytes. The microgametophytes have antheridia, which in turn produce sperm. The megagametophytes have archegonia, which produce egg cells. Fertilization takes place when the motile sperm from a microgametophyte locates the archegonia of a megagametophyte and swims inside to fertilize the egg.
Outside of heterospory, a distinguishing feature of Isoetes (and Selaginella) from other pteridophytes, is that their gametophytes grow inside the spores. This means that the gametophytes never leave the protection of the spore that disperses them, cracking the perispore (the outer layer of the spore) just enough to allow the passage of gametes. This is fundamentally different from ferns, where the gametophyte is a photosynthetic plant exposed to the elements of its environment. However, containment creates a separate problem for Isoetes, which is that the gametophytes have no way to acquire energy on their own. Isoetes sporophytes solve this problem by provisioning starches and other nutrients to the spores as an energy reserve for the eventual gametophytes. Although not a homologous process, this provisioning is somewhat analogous to other modes of offspring resource investment in seed-plants, such as fruits and seeds. The extent to which resources provisioned to the megaspore also support the growth of the new sporophyte is unknown in Isoetes.
Dispersal
Spore dispersal occurs primarily in water (hydrochory) but may also occur via adherence to animals (zoochory) and as a result of ingestion (endozoochory). These are among the reasons suggested for the ornamentations of the spore, with some authors demonstrating that certain patterns seem well-adapted for sticking to relevant animals like waterfowl. Another critical element of dispersal is the observation that in some species of Isoetes, the outer coat of megaspores have pockets that trap microspores, a condition known as synaptospory. Typically, heterospory means that colonization and long-dispersal are more difficult due to the fact that a single spore cannot grow a bisexual gametophyte and thus cannot establish a new population from a single spore as can happen in homosporous ferns.Isoetes may mitigate this issue via microspores stuck to megaspores, greatly increasing the possibility of successful fertilization upon dispersal.
Species
As of November 2019, Plants of the World Online accepted the following extant species:
- Isoetes abyssinica Chiov.
- Isoetes acadiensis Kott
- Isoetes aemulans J.P.Roux
- Isoetes aequinoctialis Welw. ex A.Br.
- Isoetes alcalophila S.Halloy
- Isoetes alpina Kirk – New Zealand quillwort
- Isoetes alstonii C.F.Reed & Verdc.
- Isoetes × altonharvillii Musselman
- Isoetes amazonica A.Br.
- Isoetes anatolica Prada & Rolleri
- Isoetes andicola (Amstutz) L.D.Gómez
- Isoetes andina Spruce ex Hook.
- Isoetes appalachiana D.F.Brunt. & D.M.Britton – Appalachian quillwort
- Isoetes araucaniana Macluf & Hickey
- Isoetes asiatica (Makino) Makino
- Isoetes attenuata C.R.Marsden & Chinnock
- Isoetes australis S.Williams – Australian quillwort
- Isoetes azorica Durieu
- Isoetes baculata Hickey & H.P.Fuchs
- Isoetes biafrana Alston
- Isoetes bischlerae H.P.Fuchs
- Isoetes bolanderi Engelm. – Bolander's quillwort
- Isoetes boliviensis U.Weber
- Isoetes boomii Luebke – Boom's quillwort; southeast US
- Isoetes boryana Durieu
- Isoetes boyacensis H.P.Fuchs
- Isoetes bradei Herter
- Isoetes brasiliensis H.P.Fuchs
- Isoetes brevicula E.R.L.Johnson
- Isoetes × brittonii D.F.Brunt. & W.C.Taylor
- Isoetes × bruntonii Knepper & Musselman
- Isoetes butleri Engelm. – Butler's quillwort
- Isoetes cangae J.B.S.Pereira, Salino & Stützel
- Isoetes capensis
- Isoetes × carltaylorii Musselman
- Isoetes caroli E.R.L.Johnson – Brazil
- Isoetes caroliniana (A.A.Eaton) Luebke is regarded by Plants of the World Online as a synonym of Isoetes valida, but other sources treat it as a valid species
- Isoetes chubutiana Hickey, Macluf & W.C.Taylor
- Isoetes coreana Y.H.Chung & H.K.Choi is a synonym of Isoetes sinensis var. coreana
- Isoetes coromandelina L.f.
- Isoetes creussensis Lazare & S.Riba
- Isoetes cristata C.R.Marsden & Chinnock
- Isoetes cubana Engelm.
- Isoetes delilei (Bory) Rothm.
- Isoetes dispora Hickey
- Isoetes dixitii Shende
- Isoetes × dodgei A.A.Eaton
- Isoetes drummondii A.Braun – Drummond's quillwort
- Isoetes durieui Bory – Durieu's quillwort
- Isoetes × eatonii R.Dodge – Eaton's quillwort
- Isoetes echinospora Durieu
- Isoetes × echtuckerii D.F.Brunt. & D.M.Britton
- Isoetes ecuadoriensis Aspl.
- Isoetes ekmanii U.Weber
- Isoetes elatior A.Braun
- Isoetes eludens J.P.Roux, Hopper & Rhian J.Sm. – elusive quillwort
- Isoetes engelmannii A.Braun – Engelmann's quillwort
- Isoetes escondidensis S.Halloy
- Isoetes eshbaughii Hickey & H.P.Fuchs
- Isoetes × fairbrothersii J.D.Montgom. & W.C.Taylor
- Isoetes flaccida Shuttlew. – southern quillwort
- Isoetes fluitans M.I.Romero
- Isoetes × foveolata A.A.Eaton
- Isoetes fuliginosa R.L.Small & Hickey
- Isoetes fuscomarginata H.P.Fuchs
- Isoetes gardneriana Kunze
- Isoetes georgiana Luebke – Georgia quillwort; southeast US
- Isoetes giessii Launert
- Isoetes gigantea U.Weber
- Isoetes × gopalkrishnae S.K.Singh, P.K.Shukla & N.K.Dubey
- Isoetes graniticola D.F.Brunt.
- Isoetes gunnii A.Braun
- Isoetes gymnocarpa (Gennari) A.Braun
- Isoetes habbemensis Alston
- Isoetes hallasanensis H.K.Choi, Ch.Kim & J.Jung – Korea
- Isoetes × harveyi A.A.Eaton (syn. Isoetes × heterospora Eaton)
- Isoetes haussknechtii Troìa & Greuter
- Isoetes hawaiiensis W.C.Taylor & W.H.Wagner
- Isoetes heldreichii Wettst.
- Isoetes hemivelata R.L.Small & Hickey
- Isoetes × herb-wagneri W.C.Taylor
- Isoetes herzogii U.Weber
- Isoetes hewitsonii Hickey
- Isoetes × hickeyi W.C.Taylor & Luebke
- Isoetes hieronymi U.Weber
- Isoetes histrix Bory – land quillwort; Channel Islands
- Isoetes hopei J.R.Croft
- Isoetes howellii Engelm. – Howell's quillwort
- Isoetes humilior A.Braun
- Isoetes hyemalis D.F.Brunt. is a synonym of Isoetes riparia var. amesii
- Isoetes hypsophila Hand.-Mazz.
- Isoetes inflata E.R.L.Johnson
- Isoetes jaegeri Pitot
- Isoetes jamaicensis Hickey
- Isoetes japonica A.Braun – Japan
- Isoetes × jeffreyi D.M.Britton & D.F.Brunt.
- Isoetes jejuensis H.K.Choi, Ch.Kim & J.Jung
- Isoetes junciformis D.F.Brunt. & D.M.Britton – rush quillwort; southeast US
- Isoetes karstenii A.Braun
- Isoetes killipii C.V.Morton
- Isoetes kirkii A.Braun
- Isoetes labri-draconis N.R.Crouch
- Isoetes lacustris L. – lake quillwort
- Isoetes laosiensis C.Kim & H.K.Choi
- Isoetes lechleri Mett.
- Isoetes libanotica Musselman, Bolin & R.D.Bray
- Isoetes lithophila N.Pfeiff.
- Isoetes longissima Bory
- Isoetes louisianensis Thieret – Louisiana quillwort
- Isoetes luetzelburgii U.Weber
- Isoetes macrospora
- Isoetes malinverniana Ces. & De Not.
- Isoetes × marensis D.M.Britton & D.F.Brunt.
- Isoetes maritima Underw. – maritime quillwort
- Isoetes martii A.Braun
- Isoetes mattaponica Musselman & W.C.Taylor
- Isoetes maxima Hickey, Macluf & Link-Pérez
- Isoetes melanopoda J.Gay & Durieu – black-footed quillwort
- Isoetes melanospora Engelm. – black-spored quillwort
- Isoetes melanotheca Alston
- Isoetes mexicana Underw. (syn. Isoetes montezumae A.A.Eaton)
- Isoetes × michinokuana M.Takamiya, Mits.Watan. & K.Ono
- Isoetes microvela D.F.Brunt.
- Isoetes minima A.A.Eaton
- Isoetes mississippiensis S.W.Leonard, W.C.Taylor, Musselman & R.D.Bray
- Isoetes mongerensis E.R.L.Johnson – Monger quillwort
- Isoetes montana U.Weber
- Isoetes mourabaptistae J.B.S.Pereira, P.G.Windisch, Lorscheitt. & Labiak
- Isoetes muelleri A.Braun – Mueller's quillwort
- Isoetes naipiana P.G.Windisch, Lorscheitt. & Nervo
- Isoetes nana J.B.S.Pereira
- Isoetes neoguineensis
- Isoetes nigritiana A.Br.
- Isoetes nigroreticulata Verdc.
- Isoetes × novae-angliae D.F.Brunt. & D.M.Britton
- Isoetes novogranadensis H.P.Fuchs
- Isoetes nuttallii A.Braun – Nuttall's quillwort
- Isoetes occidentalis L.F.Hend.
- Isoetes olympica A.Br.
- Isoetes orcuttii A.A.Eaton - Orcutt's quillwort
- Isoetes organensis U.Weber
- Isoetes orientalis Hong Liu & Q.F.Wang
- Isoetes ovata N.Pfeiff.
- Isoetes pallida Hickey
- Isoetes palmeri H.P.Fuchs
- Isoetes panamensis Maxon & C.V.Morton
- Isoetes × paratunica D.F.Brunt., Mochalova & A.A.Bobrov
- Isoetes parvula Hickey
- Isoetes pedersenii H.P.Fuchs ex E.I.Meza & Macluf
- Isoetes perralderiana Durieu & Letourn. ex Milde
- Isoetes perrieriana Iversen
- Isoetes philippinensis Merr. & L.M.Perry
- Isoetes phrygia Hausskn.
- Isoetes piedmontana (N.Pfeiff.) C.F.Reed – Piedmont quillwort
- Isoetes pitotii Alston
- Isoetes precocia R.L.Small & Hickey
- Isoetes pringlei Underw.
- Isoetes prototypus D.M.Britton & Goltz
- Isoetes pseudojaponica M.Takamiya, Mits.Watan. & K.Ono
- Isoetes × pseudotruncata D.M.Britton & D.F.Brunt.
- Isoetes pusilla C.R.Marsden & Chinnock
- Isoetes quiririensis J.B.S.Pereira & Labiak
- Isoetes ramboi Herter
- Isoetes riparia Engelm. ex A.Braun
- Isoetes sabatina Troìa & Azzella
- Isoetes saccharata Engelm.
- Isoetes sahyadrii Mahab.
- Isoetes saracochensis Hickey
- Isoetes savatieri Franch.
- Isoetes schweinfurthii A.Br.
- Isoetes sehnemii H.P.Fuchs
- Isoetes septentrionalis D.F.Brunt.
- Isoetes serracarajensis J.B.S.Pereira, Salino & Stützel
- Isoetes setacea Lam.
- Isoetes sinensis T.C.Palmer – China
- Isoetes smithii H.P.Fuchs
- Isoetes spannagelii H.P.Fuchs
- Isoetes spinulospora C.Jermy & Schelpe
- Isoetes stellenbossiensis A.V.Duthie
- Isoetes stephanseniae A.V.Duthie
- Isoetes stevensii J.R.Croft
- Isoetes storkii T.C.Palmer
- Isoetes taiwanensis De Vol – Taiwan
- Isoetes tamaulipana Mora-Olivo, A.Mend. & Mart.-Aval. – Tamaulipas, México
- Isoetes tegetiformans Rury – mat-forming quillwort
- Isoetes tenella Léman ex Desv. – spiny-spore quillwort
- Isoetes tennesseensis Luebke & Budke – Tennessee quillwort; southeast US
- Isoetes tenuifolia Jermy
- Isoetes tenuissima Boreau – French quillwort
- Isoetes texana Singhurst, Rushing & W.C.Holmes
- Isoetes todaroana Troìa & Raimondo
- Isoetes toximontana Musselman & J.P.Roux - green-spored quillwort; South Africa
- Isoetes transvaalensis C.Jermy & Schelpe
- Isoetes triangula U.Weber
- Isoetes tripus A.Braun
- Isoetes truncata Clute
- Isoetes tuckermanii A.Braun ex Engelm.
- Isoetes tuerckheimii Brause
- Isoetes udupiensis P.K.Shukla, G.K.Srivast., S.K.Shukla & P.K.Rajagopal
- Isoetes ulei U.Weber
- Isoetes valida Clute – Carolina or strong quillwort
- Isoetes vanensis M.Keskin & G.Zare
- Isoetes vermiculata Hickey
- Isoetes virginica N.Pfeiff. is a synonym of Isoetes melanopoda subsp. melanopoda
- Isoetes viridimontana M.A.Rosenthal & W.C.Taylor – Green Mountain quillwort
- Isoetes weberi Herter
- Isoetes welwitschii A.Br. ex Kuhn
- Isoetes wormaldii Sim
- Isoetes yunguiensis Q.F.Wang & W.C.Taylor
Many species, such as the Louisiana quillwort and the mat-forming quillwort, are endangered species. Several species of Isoetes are commonly called Merlin's grass, especially I. lacustris, but also the endangered species I. tegetiformans.
Evolution
Fossilised specimens of I. beestonii have been found in rocks dating to the latest Permian. Quillworts are considered to be the closest extant relatives of the fossil tree Lepidodendron, with which they share some unusual features including the development of both wood and bark, a modified shoot system acting as roots, bipolar growth, and an upright stance. Studies indicates that the Isoetes crown group which exist today evolved from a single lineage in the early Cenozoic.
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External links
- Checklist of World Ferns, Family Isoetaceae, genus Isoetes; world species list. (143 species)
- Distribution and classification list for world isoetes
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