Banded tubes are a type of phytoclast consisting of micrometre-scale tubes with a banded internal ornamentation, and known from terrestrial/freshwater[1] settings from the Early Silurian onwards.[2]
The bands on the walls were an early improvisation to aid the easy flow of water,[3] and served as tracheids, although they are not equivalent in their construction. Banded tubes were lignified,[4] giving them a more rigid structure than hydroids, allowing them to cope with higher levels of water pressure.[5]
Banded tubes have a markedly different ultrastructure from plant tracheids, and display a wide variety of wall structures, which implies that they were produced by a variety of different organisms, or perhaps were widely variable within a single nematophyte-like organism.[1]
Proposed functions include water transport, feeding (cf. fungal hyphae), and anchorage (cf. rhizoids).[1]
Some banded tubes can be assigned to genera such as Nematoplexus and Nematasketum, in the latter, they occur in bundles alongside other tubes; Nematasketum is probably fungal.[6]
^ abcTaylor, W. A.; Wellman, C. H. (2009). "Ultrastructure of Enigmatic Phytoclasts (Banded Tubes) from the Silurian-Lower Devonian: Evidence for Affinities and Role in Early Terrestrial Ecosystems". PALAIOS. 24 (3): 167–180. Bibcode:2009Palai..24..167T. doi:10.2110/palo.2008.p08-046r.
^Niklas, K. J.; Smocovitis, V. (1983). "Evidence for a Conducting Strand in Early Silurian (Llandoverian) Plants: Implications for the Evolution of the Land Plants". Paleobiology. 9 (2): 126–137. doi:10.2307/2400461. JSTOR2400461.
^Niklas, K. J. (1985). "The Evolution of Tracheid Diameter in Early Vascular Plants and Its Implications on the Hydraulic Conductance of the Primary Xylem Strand". Evolution. 39 (5): 1110–1122. doi:10.2307/2408738. JSTOR2408738. PMID28561493.
^Sperry, J. S. (2003). "Evolution of Water Transport and Xylem Structure". International Journal of Plant Sciences. 164 (3): S115–S127. doi:10.1086/368398. JSTOR3691719.