Anthoceros
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| Anthoceros | |
|---|---|
| Anthoceros agrestis | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Plantae |
| Division: | Anthocerotophyta |
| Class: | Anthocerotopsida |
| Order: | Anthocerotales |
| Family: | Anthocerotaceae |
| Genus: | Anthoceros L. |
| Type species | |
| Anthoceros punctatus Linnaeus 1753 | |
| Species | |
|
See text | |
| Synonyms | |
| |
Anthoceros is a genus of hornworts in the family Anthocerotaceae. It is distributed globally. Species of Anthoceros are characterized by having a small to medium-sized, green thallus that is more or less lobed along the margins.[1]
The name Anthoceros means 'flower horn', referring to the characteristic horn-shaped sporophytes that all hornworts produce.[citation needed]
Description
The spores are dark gray, dark brown or black. This distinguishes it from the related genus Phaeoceros, which produces yellow spores.[1][2] The thallus lacks air chambers and scales, and has no well defined mid rib. It has unicellular smooth rhizoids in the ventral region. It is irregularly lobed, and exhibits rare dichotomous branching. The thallus has little to no tissue differentiation, being composed of thin, compactly arranged uniform parenchymatous cells.
Anthoceros species are host to species of Nostoc, a symbiotic relationship in which Nostoc provides nitrogen to its host through cells known as heterocysts, and which are able to carry out photosynthesis.[3] The Nostoc colonies are present on the lower ventral surface. They often grow in slime pores, mucilaginous groups of decomposed cells within the plant which open outward through a pore guarded by 2 cells. Nostoc colonies are visible as blue-green patches on the plant body.[citation needed]
The plants grow in moist clay soils on hills, in ditches, and in damp hollows among rocks.[citation needed]