Lycophyta (division)

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      1. <skos:prefLabel xml:lang="en">Lycophyta (division)</skos:prefLabel>

      2. <skos:prefLabel xml:lang="la">Lycophyta (division)</skos:prefLabel>

      3. <skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">club mosses</skos:altLabel>

      4. <skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">club moss</skos:altLabel>

      5. <skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">club-mosses</skos:altLabel>

      6. <skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">lycopodiophytes</skos:altLabel>

      7. <skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">club mosses and tree scales</skos:altLabel>

      8. <skos:altLabel xml:lang="en">Division Lycophyta</skos:altLabel>

      9. <skos:broader rdf:resource="http://museovirtualfelixcanada.digibis.com//concepts/82816" />
      10. <skos:note xml:lang="en">Small plant distinguished by the club-like shape of its upright fertile spore-cases and the very small microphylls, a kind of leaf that arose and evolved independently from the leaves of other vascular plants; the microphyll has only a single unbranched strand of vascular tissue. While this division is a small and inconspicuous group of plants today, in the Carboniferous some lycophytes were forest-forming trees more than 35 meters tall. Lycophytes are the oldest extant group of vascular plants, and dominated major habitats for 40 million years.</skos:note>

      11. <skos:notation>300310157</skos:notation>

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