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Ferns, mosses and gymnosperms
Because ferns (Pteridophyta) and gymnosperms are part of the larger category of vascular plants (Tracheophyta) and share common features that mosses lack. Perhaps also because of the spurious notion that "seed ferns" (Pteridospermatophyta), the ancestors of the gymnosperms, evolved from ferns. In fact, "seed ferns" are a large, heterogeneous category of plants which are generally believed to be only distantly related to true ferns.
Ferns, mosses and gymnosperms (such as pines, cedar, cycas, cycad)
angiosperms
Gymnosperms
Mosses and Ferns both reproduce using spores instead of seeds or flowers. Mosses and Ferns are both plants. Mosses and Ferns are both made up of cells. Mosses and Ferns both photosynthesize.
The most popular non-flowering plants are probably mosses, ferns, and conifers (example: pine trees). and what they are are plants that have no flowers Yes, that is exactly right. Plants with no flowers. Plants without flowers will reproduce by a naked seed (gymnosperms, like conifers), which is a seed without a flower (flowering plants have their seed encased in the ovary of the flower during pollination), or by spores (ferns, mosses).
I believe mosses and ferns release spores that become other mosses and ferns later on.
mosses and ferns get water by absorbing the moistness
Non-flowering plants include: conifers and other gymnosperms ferns clubmosses hornworts liverworts mosses green algae
Bacterial cells, spermatozoa i.e. human sperm cell, green algae, ferns, mosses and some gymnosperms.
Non-flowering plants include: conifers and other gymnosperms ferns clubmosses hornworts liverworts mosses green algae