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A Evolution Story.

From History:
Subject: Plant Evolution.
~95 Million Years Ago (+/- 5 million)
Tall, fire-resistant, long-lived conifer specialization.
The modern coast redwood species is about 25 million years old, but its lineage reaches back roughly 100 million years into the age of dinosaurs.

Now to clarify.

This coastal redwood species emerged about 25 million years ago during the Miocene era. The redwood lineage emerged during the age of dinosaurs about 95 million years ago.

Now, the details…

These trees descend from a line that was already ancient when dinosaurs dominated the land. During the age of dinosaurs, the lineage that would become modern coast redwoods separated from other conifers.

Redwoods belong to Cupressaceae (defined by scale-like leaves and fused woody cones). Within that family, they evolved exceptional height through efficient vascular transport, thick tannin-rich bark resistant to fire and insects, and the ability to sprout clonally. Coastal redwoods, in particular, also take advantage of fog-assisted water uptake.

Pictured: Sequoia sempervirens. This coastal redwood species emerged about 25 million years ago during the Miocene era. This picture was taken in Armstrong Redwoods State Natural Reserve near Guerneville, California.


That Evolution Story, 

was first published on TST 1 week ago.

By the way, the flashcard inspired by it is this.

Front: In evolution, what two terms refer to the modern form the ancestral branch?
Back: Species and lineage

 

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