Spores
Horsetails produce seeds while mosses, ferns, and conifers produce spores.
Mosses reproduce by spores.
Ferns reproduce by producing spores through sporangia, while mosses reproduce by releasing spores from capsules at the tips of stalks called sporophytes. Spores from both ferns and mosses are dispersed by wind and water to colonize new areas and germinate into new plants.
No, they are not. Mosses are non-flowering plants that reproduce by spores.
Moss does not produce seeds like flowering plants; instead, it reproduces through spores. Spores are dispersed by the wind or water and can germinate to produce new moss plants.
Non-seed plants reproduce through spores. Spores are produced in specialized structures on the plant, such as sporangia, and are released into the environment where they can germinate into new plants under favorable conditions. This process is called spore dispersal and allows non-seed plants like ferns and mosses to spread and reproduce.
In mosses, adaptations for dispersal include spores produced in capsules that are dispersed by wind or water, and structures like gametophores and rhizoids that aid in attachment and colonization of new habitats. In ferns, adaptations for dispersal include spores produced in sporangia that are dispersed by wind, and structures like rhizomes and adventitious roots that aid in vegetative propagation and colonization of new areas.
Ferns are seedless vascular plants while mosses are just seedless.
Mosses produce spores instead of seeds for reproduction. Spores are tiny, single-celled reproductive units that are dispersed by the wind to find suitable growing conditions to germinate and develop into new moss plants.
Two plants that do not make seeds are ferns and mosses. Ferns reproduce through spores, which are not enclosed in a fruit or seed, while mosses reproduce via spores and do not produce true seeds.
One method of reproduction in bryophytes is through spores. Spores are produced by sporophyte structures and are dispersed to grow into new gametophyte plants. Bryophytes include mosses, liverworts, and hornworts.
Mosses grow from special cells called rhizomes. The rhizomes are the ones that will produce rhizoids which stems will grow from.