Cladoxylopsid trees
Archaeopteris trees
Modern trees
Guangdedendron
Lycopsid trees
400 MYA TODAY
DEVONIAN PERIOD
(419-359 MYA)
Archaeopteris
tree
Cladoxylopsid
tree
Other roots from the period
Main roots
split into
pairs
Rootlet Hollow
BUILDING BETTER ROOTS
Early tree types had increasingly
sophisticated root systems. While
the simple radiating roots of
cladoxylopsids limited the trees’
size, branching roots supported
greater weight and height.
Guangdedendron’s
main roots divided in
two. Lateral rootlets
were likely hollow to
carry air in the oxygen-
poor environment.
EARLIEST TREES
The first major tree types all
went extinct, but Archaeopteris
is an indirect ancestor of today’s
trees. The group that includes
Guangdedendron, the lycopsids,
survives as much smaller plants.
SOURCES: “THE MOST EXTENSIVE DEVONIAN FOSSIL FOREST WITH SMALL LYCOPSID TREES BEARING THE EARLIEST STIGMARIAN ROOTS,” CURRENT BIOLOGY; CHRIS BERRY,
CARDIFF UNIVERSITY; PATRICIA GENSEL, UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA AT CHAPEL HILL; GAVIN FOSTER, UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON; BRIGITTE MEYER-BERTHAUD,
CNRS; ERNEST M. GIFFORD AND ADRIANCE S. FOSTER, MORPHOLOGY AND EVOLUTION OF VASCULAR PLANTS; YOU-AN ZHU, CHINESE ACADEMY OF SCIENCES; NOAA