446 CHAPTER 17
FIGURE 17.14 Phylogeny and Pa-
leozoic fossil record of major groups
of terrestrial plants and their closest
relatives among the green algae (Chlo-
rophyta). The broad bars show the
known temporal distribution of each
group in the Paleozoic fossil record.
The green algae, liverworts, hornworts,
mosses, club mosses, spike mosses,
quillworts, horsetails, ferns, and seed
plants have living representatives.
(After [45].)
Futuyma Kirkpatrick Evolution, 4e
Sinauer Associates
Troutt Visual Services
Evolution4e_17.15.ai Date 01-17-2017
Embryophytes
(terrestrialization)
Tracheophytes
Coleochaetales
Charales
Marchantiopsida (liverworts)
Anthoceratopsida (hornworts)
Bryopsida (mosses)
Aglaophyton
Rhyniopsida
Drepanophycales
Lycopodiaceae (club mosses)
Protolepidodendrales
Selaginellales (spike mosses)
Isoetales (quillworts)
Zosterophyllopsida
Psilophyton
Sphenopsida (horsetails)
Ferns
Seed plants
Chlorophyta
(green algae)
C O S D C P
485 443 419 359 299
Time (Mya)
one of the great unknowns of vertebrate evolution.) It is also during the Silurian
that the bony fishes (Osteichthyes) arose. During the Devonian (419–359 Mya),
two subclasses of bony fishes flourished: the ray-finned fishes that would later
diversify into the largest group of modern fishes (the teleosts), and the lobe-finned
fishes (Sarcopterygii), which included lungfishes and our own ancestors. Immense
coral reefs developed during the Silurian and Devonian, but these were among the
victims of a major extinction in the late Devonian.
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