Ferns can evolve 'backward,' scientists discover

Evolution is often depicted as a steady forward march from simple to complex forms. But new research shows that certain ferns can evolve ‘backward.’

A close-up of a Christmas fern
Unfurling fiddlehead of the Christmas fern (Polystichum acrostichoides).
(Image credit: Jacob S. Suissa, CC BY-ND)

Imagine a photograph of your great-grandparents, grandparents and parents side by side. You'd see a resemblance, but each generation would look distinct from its predecessors. This is the process of evolution in its simplest form: descent with modification.

Over many generations, a staggering amount of modification is possible. This is how the diversity of life on Earth came to be.

Jacob S. Suissa
Assistant Professor of Plant Evolutionary Biology, University of Tennessee

As a plant evolutionary biologist, Jacob S. Suissa applies his research and education experience to understand how plant traits are constructed, how they function and how they have evolved across geologic time. He is also a science communicator working closely with a fellow botanist to democratize the study of plant biology through the production of academically rigorous (yet accessible) videos free to the public on social media at @letsbotanize.