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]

Anthoceros
Anthoceros agrestis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Anthocerotophyta
Class: Anthocerotopsida
Order: Anthocerotales
Family: Anthocerotaceae
Genus: Anthoceros
L.
Type species
Anthoceros punctatus
Linnaeus 1753
Species

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Synonyms
  • Ceranthus von Linné 1758 ex Gilibert 1787 non Schreb. 1789
  • Carpoceros Dumortier 1822
  • Aspiromitus Stephani 1916b
  • Sphaerosporoceros Hässel 1988
  • Anthoceros (Sphaerosporoceros) (Hässel 1988) Cargill & Scott 1997
  • Anthoceros section Fusiformes Grolle 1976
  • Aspiromitus section Brachyanthoceros Schuster 1992

Etymology

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The name Anthoceros means 'flower horn', referring to the characteristic horn-shaped sporophytes that all hornworts produce.

Description

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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.

The plants grow in moist clay soils on hills, in ditches, and in damp hollows among rocks.

Reproduction

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Anthoceros species exhibit many forms of asexual reproduction. Besides fragmentation, a nearly ubiquitous form, these hornworts exhibit tubers, persistent apices, and apospory. Tubers and persistent apices can remain dormant and survive harsh conditions to form new thalli. Apospory, a form of apomixis, involves the formation of diploid gametophyte spores directly from the tissue of the plant's sporophyte.

Species

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List of species.[4][5]

References

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  1. ^ a b Peng, Tao; Zhu, Rui-Liang (2013). "A revision of the genus Anthoceros (Anthocerotaceae, Anthocerotophyta) in China". Phytotaxa. 100 (1): 21–35. doi:10.11646/phytotaxa.100.1.3. ISSN 1179-3163.
  2. ^ Proskauer, Johannes (1951). "Studies on Athocerotales. III". Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club. 78 (4): 331–349. doi:10.2307/2481996. JSTOR 2481996.
  3. ^ Enderlin, C. S. and J. C. Meeks. (1983). Pure culture and reconstitution of the Anthoceros-Nostoc symbiotic association. Planta 158(2) 157-65.
  4. ^ Brinda, John C.; Atwood, John J. "The Bryophyte Nomenclator". 7 December 2022. Retrieved 7 December 2022.
  5. ^ Söderström; et al. (2016). "World checklist of hornworts and liverworts". PhytoKeys (59): 1–826. doi:10.3897/phytokeys.59.6261. PMC 4758082. PMID 26929706.
  6. ^ Ibarra-Morales, A., M. E. Muñíz, and S. Valencia. (2015). The genus Anthoceros (Anthocerotaceae, Anthocerotophyta) in Central Mexico. Phytotaxa [S.l.], v. 205, n. 4, p. 215–28.