Heterospory is the production of
spores of two different sizes and sexes by the
sporophytes of
land plants. Heterospory was evolved from
isospory independently by several plant groups in the
Devonian period as part of the process of
evolution of the timing of
sex differentiation. Heterosporic plants produce small spores called
microspores which either germinate to become free-living male
gametophytes or have reduced
male gametophytes packaged within them, and larger spores called
megaspores that either germinate into free-living
female gametophytes, or which have a female gametophyte packaged within them which is retained in and nurtured by the
sporophyte phase, a condition referred to as endospory. Heterosporous species are thus usually
dioicous, a condition that promotes outcrossing. Some heterosporous species produce micro- and megaspores in the same
sporangium, a condition known as homoangy, while in others the micro- and megaspores are produced in separate sporangia (heterangy). These may both be borne on the same
monoecious sporophyte or on different sporophytes in
dioecious species.