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by adrian_b
179 days ago
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That is a very good question. Plants grow tall to be able to gather light, instead of staying in a shadow. Fungi and many other terrestrial organisms that reproduce like fungi (e.g. slime molds and myxobacteria) grow above the ground only in order to be able to launch their spores into the wind. It does not seem possible to explain the size of Prototaxites by the need of launching spores in the wind. The only plausible explanation is that it was tall in order to ensure access to light. If it was not a plant, it might have had a symbiotic relationship with a phototrophic living being, which grew on the surface of Prototaxites, i.e. either a blue-green alga (Cyanobacteria) or a green alga, exactly like the present lichens. Prototaxites could have provided access to light, water and minerals, while the alga would have provided food. |
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Thought the same, but that implies both that it grew in very dense "forests" (mono-species because there were no competitors) and probably that it had leaves (because otherwise trunks don't occlude much light).
Although, counterexample: why do (some) cactuses grow tall? Claude provides these explanations that might apply:
Water collection and storage — Height means more volume for water storage. A large saguaro can hold thousands of liters of water in its stem, which is crucial for surviving long droughts.
Temperature regulation — Being taller gets the growing tip and flowers farther from the scorching ground surface, where temperatures can be extreme. The ground in deserts can reach 70°C (160°F), while air temperature a few meters up is significantly cooler.