True ferns (
Filicales) are vascular plants that reproduce by way of spores that require water to disperse their
gametophytes. Families of ferns are classified according to the arrangement and morphology of their sporangia and are generally categorized into two groups: the
eusporangia and
leptosprangia.
Asterotheca exhibited eusporangia that are partially fused within a larger
synangium that is most commonly characterized with four to eight sporangia. The reproduction cycle of
Asterotheca, like that of all seedless ferns, is an
alternation of generations. In this life cycle, there is an alternation between two different forms (gametophytes and sporophytes) that are alternately sexual and asexual. The alternation of generations in ferns can be generalized in five steps: • Gametophytes produce
haploid gametes via
mitosis • Two gametes unite (one from another plant) and form a
diploid zygote • The newly formed zygote develops into a multicellular diploid
sporophyte • The sporophyte produces haploid spores by meiosis • The spores develop into multicellular haploid gametophytes ==Fructifications of some Paleozoic seedless plants==