Raven J A, Edwards D
Division of Environmental and Applied Biology, School of Biological Sciences, University of Dundee, Dundee DD1 4HN, Scotland, UK.
J Exp Bot. 2001 Mar;52(Spec Issue):381-401. doi: 10.1093/jexbot/52.suppl_1.381.
Roots, as organs distinguishable developmentally and anatomically from shoots (other than by occurrence of stomata and sporangia on above-ground organs), evolved in the sporophytes of at least two distinct lineages of early vascular plants during their initial major radiation on land in Early Devonian times (c. 410-395 million years ago). This was some 15 million years after the appearance of tracheophytes and c. 50 million years after the earliest embryophytes of presumed bryophyte affinity. Both groups are known initially only from spores, but from comparative anatomy of extant bryophytes and later Lower Devonian fossils it is assumed that, during these times, below-ground structures (if any) other than true roots fulfilled the functions of anchorage and of water and nutrient acquisition, despite lacking an endodermis (as do the roots of extant Lycopodium spp.). By 375 million years ago root-like structures penetrated almost a metre into the substratum, greatly increasing the volume of mineral matter subject to weathering by the higher than atmospheric CO(2) levels generated by plant and microbial respiration in material with restricted diffusive contact with the atmosphere. Chemical weathering consumes CO(2) in converting silicates into bicarbonate and Si(OH)(4). The CO(2) consumed in weathering ultimately came from atmospheric CO(2) via photosynthesis and respiration; this use of CO(2) probably accounts for most of the postulated 10-fold decrease in atmospheric CO(2) from 400-350 million years ago, with significant effects on shoot evolution. Subsequent evolution of roots has yielded much-branched axes down to 40 microm diameter, a lower limit set by long-distance transport constraints. Finer structures involved in the uptake of nutrients of low diffusivity in soil evolved at least 400 million years ago as arbuscular mycorrhizas or as evaginations of "roots" ("root hairs").
根作为在发育和解剖学上与茎可区分的器官(地上器官上的气孔和孢子囊除外),是在早泥盆世时期(约4.1亿至3.95亿年前)早期维管植物最初在陆地上大规模辐射期间,在至少两个不同谱系的孢子体中演化而来的。这比维管植物出现晚了约1500万年,比推测与苔藓植物有亲缘关系的最早胚植物晚了约5000万年。这两个类群最初都仅从孢子中得知,但从现存苔藓植物和早泥盆世晚期化石的比较解剖学来看,可以假定,在这些时期,除了真正的根之外的地下结构(如果有的话)履行了固定以及获取水分和养分的功能,尽管缺乏内皮层(现存石松属植物的根也是如此)。到3.75亿年前,类似根的结构已经深入地下近一米,大大增加了受风化作用影响的矿物质体积,风化作用是由植物和微生物在与大气扩散接触受限的物质中呼吸产生的高于大气水平的二氧化碳所导致的。化学风化在将硅酸盐转化为碳酸氢盐和硅酸(Si(OH)(4))的过程中消耗二氧化碳。风化过程中消耗的二氧化碳最终通过光合作用和呼吸作用来自大气中的二氧化碳;这种对二氧化碳的利用可能是假定的4亿至3.5亿年前大气中二氧化碳含量下降10倍的主要原因,对茎的进化产生了重大影响。根的后续进化产生了直径小至40微米的多分支轴,这个下限是由长距离运输限制所设定的。参与吸收土壤中低扩散性养分的更精细结构至少在4亿年前就演化成了丛枝菌根或“根”(“根毛”)的突出物。