Clevelandodendron
Extinct genus of lycopsid plants
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Clevelandodendron is an extinct genus of lycopsid known from a single specimen from the Cleveland Shale. The only known specimen is significant because it preserves the complete plant from the basal portion, featuring thick appendages at one end, to near the shoot apex. The stem, which is 2 cm wide along most of its length, bears a terminal ovoid bisporangiate strobilus at the end which is similar to those of some Lepidodendrales. The early occurrence of Clevelandodendron demonstrates that slender, unbranched lycopsids with an isoetalean plant habit existed as early as the upper Devonian and that diversification of the order may have been well established before the Carboniferous.[1]
| Clevelandodendron Temporal range: Famennian ~ | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Plantae |
| Clade: | Tracheophytes |
| Clade: | Lycophytes |
| Class: | Lycopodiopsida |
| Order: | Isoetales |
| Genus: | †Clevelandodendron Pigg & Rothwell (1996) |
| Species: | †C. ohioensis |
| Binomial name | |
| †Clevelandodendron ohioensis Pigg & Rothwell (1996) | |