Introduction to Early Plant Life
An incredible variety of seedless plants populates the terrestrial landscape. Mosses may grow on a tree trunk and horsetails may display their jointed stems and spindly leaves across the forest floor . Today, however, seedless plants represent only a small fraction of the plants in our environment. The kingdom Plantae constitutes a large and varied group of organisms with more than 300,000 species of cataloged plants. Of these, more than 260,000 are seed plants. However, three hundred million years ago, seedless plants dominated the landscape and grew in the enormous swampy forests of the Carboniferous period. Their decomposition created large deposits of coal that we mine today.
Horsetails are seedless plants
Seedless plants, like these horsetails (Equisetum sp.), thrive in damp, shaded environments under a tree canopy where dryness is rare.
Current evolutionary thought holds that all plants, green algae as well as land dwellers, are monophyletic; that is, they are descendants of a single common ancestor. The evolutionary transition from water to land imposed severe constraints on plants. They had to develop strategies: to avoid drying out, to disperse reproductive cells in air, for structural support, and for capturing and filtering sunlight. While seed plants developed adaptations that allowed them to populate even the most arid habitats on Earth, full independence from water did not happen in all plants. Most seedless plants still require a moist environment.
Seedless plants are classified into three main categories: green algae, seedless non-vascular plants, and seedless vascular plants. Seedless non-vascular plants (bryophytes), such as mosses, are the group of plants that are the closest extant relative of early terrestrial plants. Seedless vascular plants include horsetails and ferns.