Bryophytes
- Called amphibians of the plant kingdom because they live in soil but need water for sexual reproduction.
- Occur in damp, humid, and shaded localities.
- Body more differentiated than algae, thallus-like, prostrate or erect, attached to the substratum by unicellular or multicellular rhizoids.
- Lack true roots, stem, or leaves but may have root-like, leaf-like, or stem-like structures.
- Main plant body is haploid, produces gametes, called a gametophyte.
- Sex organs are multicellular.
- Male sex organ (antheridium) produces biflagellate antherozoids. Female sex organ (archegonium) is flask-shaped, produces a single egg.
- Antherozoids are released to water, meet archegonium, and fuse with the egg to form a zygote.
- Zygotes do not undergo meiosis immediately, produce a multicellular sporophyte.
- Sporophyte is not free-living, attached to the photosynthetic gametophyte, derives nourishment from it. Some sporophyte cells undergo meiosis to form haploid spores, which germinate to form gametophyte.
Importance of Bryophytes
- Some mosses provide food for herbaceous mammals, birds, and other animals.
- Species of Sphagnum (a moss) provide peat, used as fuel and as packing material for trans-shipment of living material due to its water-holding capacity.
- Ecologically important in plant succession on bare rocks/soil. Mosses and lichens decompose rocks, making the substrate suitable for higher plants.
- Form dense mats on soil, preventing soil erosion.
Bryophytes are divided into liverworts and mosses.
Liverworts
- Grow in moist, shady habitats like banks of streams, marshy ground, damp soil, bark of trees, and deep woods.
- Plant body is thalloid, e.g., Marchantia. Thallus is dorsi-ventral, closely appressed to the substrate. Leafy members have tiny leaf-like appendages in two rows on stem-like structures.
Asexual Reproduction:
- By fragmentation of thalli or formation of gemmae (sing. gemma).
- Gemmae are green, multicellular, asexual buds in gemma cups on thalli. They detach and germinate to form new individuals.
Sexual Reproduction:
- Male and female sex organs on same or different thalli.
- Sporophyte is differentiated into foot, seta, and capsule.
- After meiosis, spores are produced in the capsule, germinate to form free-living gametophytes.

Mosses
- Predominant stage is the gametophyte, with two stages:
- Protonema stage: Develops from a spore, creeping, green, branched, often filamentous.
- Leafy stage: Develops from secondary protonema as a lateral bud, with upright, slender axes, spirally arranged leaves, attached to soil by multicellular, branched rhizoids. Bears sex organs.
Vegetative Reproduction:
- By fragmentation and budding in the secondary protonema.
Sexual Reproduction:
- Antheridia and archegonia produced at the apex of leafy shoots.
- After fertilisation, the zygote develops into a sporophyte with foot, seta, and capsule.
- Sporophyte in mosses is more elaborate than in liverworts. Capsule contains spores formed after meiosis.
- Mosses have an elaborate spore dispersal mechanism.
- E.g., Funaria, Polytrichum, Sphagnum.

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