Themes > Science > Botanical Sciences > Plant Reproduction and Development > How Mosses Reproduce on Land


When plants came onto the land, they had to find a new way to reproduce. In water they had just released their reproductive cells, but these cells dried out in the air, and had no way to move towards each other. Obviously some of the pioneer plants must have reproduced asexually, perhaps by growing new shoots. This could work, but it didn't mix the chromosomes up to make plants with new characteristics. Innovation was needed in the new environment.

This is the solution that the mosses and some other primitive plants developed! It is pretty clever!

Study this diagram. The notes will help you to understand it. In real life these plants are much smaller.

Diagram about Alternation of Generations in Moss

Let's begin. We start at the place where

Moss grows from the spores.

You can see the little sprigs of moss. They have just grown from the spores. Although they all look pretty much alike, some of these little sprigs are male and some are female.

If you look at the pictures of the cells beside the sprigs, you will see that each cell in the picture has only half the number of chromosomes. This is called the haploid generation. (Hint: haploid = half)

Sperm swims to eggs in female moss plants.

Rain falls on the moss. (Heavy dew would also work, or the spray from a waterfall.)

The male moss plants have made sperm. These little sperms have flagella (tails like little whips). Now that there is a film of water to swim in, they swim to the eggs that the female moss plants have made.

The eggs are fertilized when the sperms reach the eggs. The fertilized eggs are called zygotes.

The zygotes have chromosomes from both the male and female parents. They are the diploid generation (Hint: diploid means double) because they have pairs of chromosomes. You can see the diagram of the cells with the paired chromosomes in the next phase.

The Zygote grows on top of the moss.

The zygote is vulnerable to being dried out, but the mosses solved this problem. The female plant holds onto her single egg (which has now become a zygote) and the zygote grows right where it is. The zygote gets some of its nourishment from the green moss that is its mother, and is kept moist there. It sends up a thin thread of tissue, and a capsule grows on the tip of it. The capsule may be shaped like a little bell. Many tiny spores form inside this capsule. The spores are haploid, and carry only half of the number of chromosomes that are in the cells of the zygote.


The mature Zygote releases spores.

When the zygote matures, the capsule opens and the little haploid spores are released into the air. They are tiny and float away, seeking out new environments where they can begin to grow. Now we are back where we started in this cycle.


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