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Yep they developed. Simply due to evolutionary characters plant kingdom is divided into many Divisions; Bryophyta, Pterophyta, Lycophyta, Cycadophyta, Coniferophyta, Anthophyta

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Q: As plants moved from water to land they developed?
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Related questions

How did plants move from water to land?

Plants moved onto land after algae was entrapped in evaporating ponds, and cast up to the sea shore, and as a majority died, a few survived to be the plants we see on land today.


Scientists believe plant life moved from water to land and that plants evolved from multicellular?

green algea


How did plant change to move from land to water?

Plants moved from land to water as a result of algae entrapment in evaporating ponds, and casting up on the sea shore, where they were subjected to dry winds, and as others died out, some survived to the ancestors of the plants on land today.


How can plants survive in land?

Plants survive in land by the water


Does most photosynthesis happen in land plants or in water plants in the ocean?

land and water ahahahahahah


Is a lotus a land plants or a water plants?

A water plant


How did adaptive radiation affect plants after they moved to land?

They evolved to fill the niches found on land.


How are charophyceans and land plants?

Land plants evolved from Charophyceans. Charophyceans lived in the water and land plants dont.


Plants may have made the transition to land when they developed?

cell walls


The land water climate plants and animals of a particular place?

the land water climate plants and animals of a particular place


What was fungis role in plants move from water to land?

Fungi provided the mechanism for plants to obtain nutrients from the soil.Scientists believe that fungi and plants have had a beneficial relationship for millions of years. Researchers have hypothesized that land plants originated in water and then moved to land. However, for a long time they were not sure how plants were able to make this transition to land without complex roots that could absorb nutrients. Now some scientists believe that the link lies in the glomeromycetes, whose hyphae attach to plant roots to help the plants pull nutrients from the soil.


Is land an autotroph?

No, plants (on land) and algae (in water) are autotrophs.