Lycopod File
Unlike modern trees, these giants lacked true woody tissue; they were structured more like a sturdy, scaly pillar, creating the surreal "jungle-y" aesthetics of the early Earth.
Club moss, a lycopod and fern relative Marilyn K. Wilkie ► Photography - Nature, Wildlife and Landscape. ... Club moss. A lycopod, Facebook·Native Plants of the Northeast lycopod
Around 350-300 million years ago, ancestors like Lepidodendron (scale trees) grew over 100-160 feet tall in vast equatorial swamp forests. Unlike modern trees, these giants lacked true woody
Modern lycopods are much smaller, generally inhabiting shady, moist, acidic soils, yet they remain a widespread, intriguing part of woodland understories. Unlike modern trees
Dendrolycopodium obscurum (flat-branched tree clubmoss) a lycopod
