Telome Concept

The concept was proposed by Walter Zimmermann in the 1930s and 1940s, which uses several "elementary processes" to explain how new plant morphologies have evolved and are present in the fossil record. Zimmermann used the architecture of the earliest land plants (i.e. rhyniophytes), and then added "elementary processes" which are quasi-developmental/evolutionary mechanisms that create new and derived plant forms found in the fossil record. Zimmermann proposed that natural selection acted on the “telomes” or distal-most axes of these early plants. Telome Concept was able to explain the increase in complexity of plant form found in the fossil record. This concept or hypothesis lacks solid testing or verification, therefore it is not being referred to as the Telome Theory.

The "telomic processes" proposed include: Over-topping, Planation, Reduction, Recurvation, Syngenesis, and Webbing

Over-topping

Planation

Reduction

Recurvation

Webbing

Syngenesis