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Pteridophyta, the Ferns

Tree fern
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Pteridophyta
Classes

Fern, or pteridophyte, is any one of a group of some twenty thousand species of plants classified in the Division Pteridophyta, formerly known by some as Filicophyta. A fern is defined as a vascular plant that lacks seeds, and that reproduces by shedding spores to initiate an alternation of generations. New fronds arise by circinate vernation (leaf formation by unrolling).

1 Fern life cycle

The life cycle of a typical fern consists of two distinct stages or generation phases (see alternation of generations), proceeding as follows:

  1. A sporophyte phase that produces spores by meiosis
  2. A spore grows by cell division into a haploid prothallus (a gametophyte phase)
  3. Prothallus produces gametes
  4. Male gamete fertilizes a female gamete
  5. The fertilized gamete ( zygoteIn biology, a zygote is the result of fertilization. That is, two haploid cells—usually (but not always) a sperm cell from a male individual and an ovum or ovule from a female—merge into a single diploid cell called the zygote''. The zygote then undergoes) grows by cell division into a diploidDiploid cells have two copies of each somatic chromosome (non-sex chromosomes), usually one from the mother and one from the father. Most somatic cells (body cells) of higher organisms are diploid or polyploid (three or more copies of each chromosome, oft sporophyte (the "fern")

2 Fern structure

A sporophytic fern consists of:

A gametophytic fern contains:



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