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thallos

Thallos is a Greek root meaning “shoot” or “twig,” from which the botanical term thallus is derived. In early and modern usage, thallos denotes a simple, undifferentiated plant body that is not organized into true stems, leaves, or roots. The form thallus, derived by adding the Latin suffix -us, is used across a range of groups to describe such bodies.

In practice, a thallus can be flat and sheet-like (thalloid), filamentous, or otherwise simple in structure, depending

The term thallos is largely encountered today in etymology, historical texts, or discussions of plant morphology,

on
the
organism.
In
algae,
the
thallus
is
the
main
vegetative
body,
as
seen
in
seaweeds
where
the
thallus
is
the
photosynthetic,
recognizable
mass.
In
bryophytes
like
some
liverworts,
a
thallus
refers
to
a
flat,
sheet-like
body
that
lacks
the
differentiated
vascular
tissues
of
higher
plants.
In
fungi
and
lichens,
the
term
is
also
used
to
describe
the
vegetative
body,
which
may
be
mycelial
or
a
cohesive,
non-woody
thallus.
whereas
thallus
is
the
common
term
used
in
contemporary
descriptions
of
organisms
with
undifferentiated
or
minimally
differentiated
bodies.
The
concept
distinguishes
simple,
body-wide
organization
from
the
more
complex
organization
seen
in
plants
with
distinct
roots,
stems,
and
leaves.
See
also
thallus,
thallophyta.