Abstract

Most attempts to understand the early evolution of tracheids have centered on fossil Silurian and Devonian vascular plants, and these efforts have led to a wealth of new information on early water‐conducting cells. All of these early tracheids appear to possess secondary cell wall thickenings composed of two distinct layers: a layer adjacent to the primary cell wall that is prone to degradation (presumably during the process of fossilization) and a degradation‐resistant (possibly lignified) layer next to the cell lumen. Developmental studies of secondary wall formation in tracheary elements of extant vascular plants have been confined to highly derived seed plants, and it is evident that the basic structure of these secondary cell wall thickenings does not correspond well to those of tracheids of the Late Silurian and Early Devonian. Significantly, secondary cell wall thickenings of tracheary elements of seed plants are not known to display the coupled degradation‐prone and degradation‐resistant layers ch...

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