HomeScienceAncient plant's leaves didn't follow golden rule as modern ones

Ancient plant’s leaves didn’t follow golden rule as modern ones


master mentalism tricks

Digital reconstruction of the ancient club moss Asteroxylon mackiei

Matt Humpage, Northern Rogue Studios

A 400-million-year-old fossil reveals that, unlike most modern plants, some of the earliest land plants didn’t have leaves radiating out at angles that follow the Fibonacci sequence. The discovery could force a re-think of a century-old theory of leafy plant evolution.

Most modern land plants grow leaves in a spiralling pattern where their angles in relation to one another settle on the “golden ratio” derived from the famous Fibonacci sequence – a set of numbers where each is the sum of the two preceding ones, as in 1, 1, 2, 3, 5 and so on. From flowering artichokes to pine cones, the pattern appears in more than 91 per cent of land plants today.

“Lots of things you’re familiar with, if you look at them in detail, you’ll actually find evidence of Fibonacci spirals,” says Sandy Hetherington at the University of Edinburgh in the UK.

Advertisement

To investigate if the earliest land plants followed this same rule, Hetherington and his colleagues examined fossils that had been extracted from a sediment deposit called Rhynie Chert in Scotland. They chose fossils of one of the oldest leafy species preserved: the club moss Asteroxylon mackiei, which grew during the Devonian Period, 400 million years ago.

The team digitally layered thin slices of the fossils – one of which had been collected over 100 years ago – into a 3D reconstruction. The model revealed a diverse set of swirls, whorls and spirals in A. mackiei’s leaves.

“I went into this investigation assuming that we were going to find Fibonacci spirals there,” says Hetherington. “It really came as a shock.”

The unusual structure suggests, contrary to many botanists’ previous assumptions, that leafy plants didn’t necessarily start out growing leaves following the Fibonacci pattern. Instead, they appear to have evolved to follow that rule over the past few hundred million years. Some modern club mosses related to A. mackiei also have non-Fibonacci spirals, so the trait hasn’t been entirely lost.

Because fossils of other kinds of primitive plants are often missing key parts of their stem or leaves, “looking at these rosette-type fossils was an extremely good idea”, says Jonathan Swinton at a Deodands, a private scientific consultancy in the UK. The finding “sets up a really interesting opportunity for interactions between mathematicians and biologists”, he says.

Researchers still don’t know why so many plants have leaves that follow the Fibonacci spiral, but some speculate that it is their way of maximising the amount of sunlight that hits each leaf.

Topics:

Read The Full Article Here


trick photography
Advertisingfutmillion

Popular posts

Hollywood Spotlight: Director Jon Frenkel Garcia
The Dutchman Cast: André Holland, Zazie Beetz & More Join
The Creator Reactions: Gareth Edwards’ Latest Is One of 2023’s
Company Paid Critics For Rotten Tomatoes Reviews
‘Fire Country’ Sneak Peek: Sharon Gets Honest With Vince During
Anna Paquin Reveals Health Issues Have Not ‘Been Easy’ as
Why X-Men 97 is the Greatest Reboot of All Time
The 50 Best Historical Dramas: ‘Shirley,’ ‘The Chosen’ & More
The Naked City Underground Release New Music
The Refusers Release “Where Did Freedom Go?”
evander - growing up - Bungalo Records:Universal Music Group
LA Dynamo evander: Shares “falling” in New Mental Health Single
Bob Green – Silver Screams for Silent Screens Review
9 Boob Tapes That Work For All Busts, Shapes, and
Here’s Why Apple Cider Vinegar Is the Ingredient Your Hair
I Travel a Lot for Work—These Are the Useful Items
The Best Street Style Looks From the Fall 2023 Couture
Physician by Day, Vigilante by Night in This Action-Packed Cyberpunk
10 Of The Best New Children’s Books Out April 2024
Interview with James Ungurait, Author of I’m The Same
Child Psychologist and Mother Shares CBT Teaching Techniques That Work
Positive associations between premenstrual disorders and perinatal depression
Poem: ‘SnapShot, 1968’
What is the smallest animal on Earth?
Experimental weight loss pill seems to be more potent than
Is The Internet Good for You?
Killing TikTok
Killing TikTok
Comedy or Tragedy?