- Lycopodiopsida.
Members of
Lepidodendrales are the best
understood of the
fossil lycopsids due to the vast
diversity of
Lepidodendrales specimens and the diversity...
-
species are small,
during the Carboniferous,
extinct tree-like
forms (
Lepidodendrales)
formed huge
forests that
dominated the
landscape and
contributed to...
-
plants belonging the
order Lepidodendrales. It is well
preserved and
common in the
fossil record. Like
other Lepidodendrales,
species of Lepidodendron...
-
plant species of the
Carboniferous period, and
included the tree-like
Lepidodendrales, some of
which grew over 40
metres (130 ft) in height,
although extant...
-
arborescent lycophytes such as
Sigillaria and
Lepidodendron under the
order Lepidodendrales. The
Paleozoic swamps had tree-like
lycopsids that grew up to 30 m...
-
Sphenophyllales (scrambling plants),
Lycopodiales (club mosses),
Lepidodendrales (scale trees),
Filicales (ferns),
Medullosales (informally included...
- lycophytes, such as the
Selaginellaceae and Isoetaceae,: 7 the
extinct Lepidodendrales, and ferns, such as the
Marsileaceae and
Salviniaceae are heterosporous...
-
include the Rhyniopsida, Zosterophyllopsida, Trimerophytopsida, the
Lepidodendrales and the Progymnospermopsida.
Modern studies of the land
plants agree...
-
Sphenophyllales (scrambling plants),
Lycopodiales (Club mosses),
Lepidodendrales (arborescent
clubmosses or
scale trees),
Filicales (Ferns), Medullosales...
-
single vascular trace.
Microphylls could grow to some size,
those of
Lepidodendrales reaching over a
meter in length, but
almost all just bear the one vascular...