Megaceros is a genus of hornworts in the family Dendrocerotaceae. The genus is found in the Old World tropics of east Asia and Australia.[2] Its name means 'big horn', and refers both to the exceptionally large size of the gametophyte thallus and to the large, horn-shaped sporophyte that the plants produce. Many species have a branching thallus that is more than two centimeters wide. The gametophytes are monoicous.
Megaceros | |
---|---|
Unidentified Megaceros specimen | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Division: | Anthocerotophyta |
Class: | Anthocerotopsida |
Order: | Dendrocerotales |
Family: | Dendrocerotaceae |
Genus: | Megaceros Campbell[1] |
Species | |
Megaceros aenigmaticus |
The genus Megaceros is unusual among hornworts in that the sporophyte does not have stomata, and the spores are green because they contain chloroplasts, as does the related genus Dendroceros. They can have as many as 14 chloroplasts per cell, the highest known number in hornworts.[3] The elaters are helical.
The genus Megaceros was first recognized in 1907 by D. Campbell. More recently, the genera Nothoceros and Phaeomegaceros have been split off from this genus. The former genus includes all New World species previously included in Megaceros.[2]
References
edit- ^ Campbell, D.H. (1907). "Studies on some Javanese Anthocerotaceae. I." Annals of Botany. 21 (4). London: 467–486. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.aob.a089148.
- ^ a b Villarreal, J.C.; Goffinet, B.; Duff, R.J.; Cargill, D.C. (2010). "Phylogenetic delineation of Nothoceros and Megaceros (Dendrocerotaceae)". The Bryologist. 113 (1): 106–113. doi:10.1639/0007-2745-113.1.106.
- ^ Bryophyte Biology
- Parihar, N. S. (1961). An Introduction to Embryophyta, Volume I. Allahabad: Central Book Depot.
External links
editData related to Megaceros at Wikispecies