Gymnosperm
Gymnosperms (Gymnospermae) is a name for a group of seed-bearing (and thus vascular plants). The term gymnosperm comes from the Greek word gumnospermos, literally meaning "naked seed": this is because the seeds of these plants are not formed in an ovule that is enclosed (and developing into a Fruit, in the angiosperms), but naked on the scales of a cone or cone-like structure. The production of seeds distinguishes the gymnosperms (along with the angiosperms) from other members of the vascular plants. Thus together they are called seed plants (Spermatophyta). Gymnosperms are heterosporous, producing microspores that develop into Pollen grains and megaspores that are retained in an ovule. After fertilization (joining of the micro- and megaspore), the resulting embryo, along with other cells comprising the ovule, develops into a seed. The seed is a sporophyte resting stage. In early classification schemes, the gymnosperms (Gymnospermae) "naked seed" plants were regarded as a "natural" group. However, fossil finds suggest that the angiosperms evolved from a gymnosperm ancestor, which would make the gymnosperms a paraphyletic taxon. Modern cladistics only accepts taxa that are monophyletic, traceable to a common ancestor and inclusive of all descendants of that common ancestor. So, while the term gymnosperm is still widely used for non-angiosperm seed-bearing plants, the plant species once treated as gymnosperms are usually distributed among four groups, which can be given equal rank as divisions within the Kingdom Plantae. These groups are:
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