Earlier ("The grasses that would be trees," March 18, 2012), I described the unique pattern of development that results in the tall, lightweight, and very strong stems of bamboos. The key to the rapid growth of bamboos is a combination of lightweight, hollow construction, plus a process of growth involving intercalary meristems in each internode that all elongate more-or-less at the same time. Before there were grasses, before in fact there were any seed plants, a group of spore-bearing relatives of ferns discovered virtually the same growth form. These were the horsetails, formally known as the Sphenophytes.
From the late Devonian, Carboniferous and Permian periods, some 350-300 million years ago, giant tree-like horsetails, growing up to 100 feet high, dominated early forests, sprouting from underground rhizomes, just like modern bamboos. They most likely elongated fairly rapidly, but develeped a modest amount of wood to support their large crown of branches.
Modern horsetails are for the most part fairly modest in size, living in shaded moist areas alongside the descendents of their other ancient companions, ferns and clubmosses. The largest, up to 8 ft or more in height, are found oddly in moist streamsides in dry areas of Central and South America. For an image, click on the link below, or if it is no longer active, do a simple web search for Equisetum giganteum: http://www2.fiu.edu/~chusb001/GiantEquisetum/Images/NorthernChile/LlutaRailroadScale2.html
Giant horsetails, commonly referred to the genus Calamites, grew like bamboos and dominated the coal-forming swamps of the Carboniferous Period. From Smith, Cryptogamic Botany, 1955, Fig. 151. |
From the late Devonian, Carboniferous and Permian periods, some 350-300 million years ago, giant tree-like horsetails, growing up to 100 feet high, dominated early forests, sprouting from underground rhizomes, just like modern bamboos. They most likely elongated fairly rapidly, but develeped a modest amount of wood to support their large crown of branches.
Modern horsetails are for the most part fairly modest in size, living in shaded moist areas alongside the descendents of their other ancient companions, ferns and clubmosses. The largest, up to 8 ft or more in height, are found oddly in moist streamsides in dry areas of Central and South America. For an image, click on the link below, or if it is no longer active, do a simple web search for Equisetum giganteum: http://www2.fiu.edu/~chusb001/GiantEquisetum/Images/NorthernChile/LlutaRailroadScale2.html
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