No, moss can not produce seeds. True moss produces a bunch of teeny-tiny pods (Opercula) on top of long stalks. When the pods mature and get dry, they open, letting the spores inside drop to the ground where they can grow. Spores are not the same as seeds.
Mosses reproduce by spores.
Moss is a type of plant, but it reproduces by spores, not seeds.
The moss rose (Portulaca grandiflora) is a seed-producing plant. It produces small seeds within its flowers that can be collected and used for propagation. Spores are typically produced by plants like ferns and mosses, not by flowering plants like the moss rose.
Mushrooms and moss
Rose moss, also known as Portulaca, reproduces primarily through seeds and vegetative propagation. The plant produces small, round, and light seeds that are dispersed by wind or water, allowing new plants to grow in suitable conditions. Additionally, rose moss can reproduce through stem cuttings, where sections of the stem can root and develop into new plants. This ability to propagate easily makes rose moss a resilient and popular choice for gardens.
I would suggest moss is neither a gymnosperm nor a angiosperm as it does not bear seeds.
yes
The back end
sperm
Does bean plant produces seeds in long pods
Heterosporous is the name given to the plant that produces seeds in the ovaries.
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.