Unlike most plants, ferns reproduce using spores instead of seeds. Sporangium, brown spots located under a fern leaf, contains spores. When it rains, the spores are dragged from the granules where they travel to the ground, take root and grow.
Spores.
Ferns reproduce by spores.
No, ferns do not have pollen. They reproduce with spores.
Whisk ferns reproduce asexually through spores that are produced in sporangia located in the axils of their leaves. The spores are released into the environment, where they can germinate and grow into new gametophytes. Whisk ferns can also reproduce sexually through the fusion of sperm and egg cells produced by specialized structures called antheridia and archegonia.
Bird's nest fern reproduce by producing spores.
Fern, fungi and lichens reproduce by shedding spores. Horse Isle Real Time Quiz Answer: spores
Spores
spores
Plants that reproduce with spores include ferns, mosses, liverworts, and some types of algae. Spores are small reproductive structures that can develop into new individuals under favorable conditions. These plants have a life cycle that alternates between a spore-producing stage (sporophyte) and a gamete-producing stage (gametophyte).
Ferns do not produce seeds. Only flowering plants produce seeds.Ferns reproduce by producing spores.
Yes, but not the same sort of spores.
Because they reproduce using spores