no
Yes.
Liverworts pertain to a class of primitive plants that grow chiefly in damp soil. They do not have roots, stems, leaves, flowers, fruits or seeds.
Liverworts, mosses, and ferns do not produce flowers or seeds. They reproduce using spores instead.
Liverworts, hornworts, and moss are non-vascular plants. Another name for them is bryophyte. They do not produce flowers or seeds, instead they reproduce with spores.
Liverworts, hornworts, and moss are non-vascular plants. Another name for them is bryophyte. They do not produce flowers or seeds, instead they reproduce with spores.
Yes, liverworts are seedless plants that reproduce through spores. They are part of a group of plants known as bryophytes, which also includes mosses and hornworts. Liverworts have a simple structure with no vascular system for transporting water and nutrients.
There are plants with seeds and also those which produce spores or gametes for reproduction. Ferns, horsetails, mosses, and liverworts do not produce flowers or grow from seeds.
They are neither. Monocots and dicots a vascular plants a liverwort is non vascular
Bryophytes (aka embryophytes) is a term used for mosses, hornworts and liverworts. These plants are small, green, rootless, and they reproduce by spores instead of seeds. Daffodils are flowering herbaceous perennials reproduce by seeds. Daffodils are NOT bryophytes.
Liverworts!
Liverworts are neither monocots nor dicots; they belong to a separate group of non-vascular plants called bryophytes. Monocots and dicots are classifications within the angiosperms (flowering plants), while liverworts are simpler plants that reproduce via spores and do not produce flowers or seeds. They are characterized by their flattened, leaf-like structures and often thrive in moist environments.
Liverworts belong to the phylum Marchantiophyta.