Cormophyte Explained

Cormophytes (Cormophyta) is a historical term seldom used today for the plants that are differentiated into roots, stems and leaves. These plants differ from thallophytes, whose body is referred to as the thallus, i.e. a simple body not differentiated into leaves and stems. Definitions have varied, notably about whether mosses and liverworts are included.[1] [2]

Stephan Endlicher, a 19th-century Austrian botanist, divided the vegetable kingdom in 1836 into two groups: the thallophytes were only the algae, lichens and fungi, and the cormophytes were the mosses, liverworts, ferns, Equisitaceae, club mosses and seed plants.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Lawrence E. (1999): Henderson's Dictionary of biological terms. Longman Group Ltd., London, .
  2. Web site: Definition of cormophyte Dictionary.com . 2022-04-28 . www.dictionary.com . en.
  3. Web site: Genera plantarum secundum ordines naturales disposita . Stephan Endlicher . 1836–1840 . F. Beck; The Biodiversity Heritage Library.