no
No, not all plants have vascular tissue. Vascular plants have xylem and phloem to transport water and nutrients. Additionally, not all plants produce seeds. Seed-producing plants are divided into gymnosperms (like conifers) and angiosperms (flowering plants).
All vascular plants do not produce seeds and fruits, only angiosperms can do it.
Seed plants have roots, stems, leaves, has vascular tissue, and flowers that produce seeds.
Vascular cryptogams are non-seed plants that have vascular tissue to transport water and nutrients, but do not produce seeds. Examples include ferns, horsetails, and clubmosses. These plants reproduce through spores instead of seeds.
Ferns, club mosses, and horsetails share two characteristics. They have true vascular tissue and they do not produce seeds. Instead of seeds, these plants reproduce by releasing spores.
the answer is in the question. they don't produce seeds, but they do have vascular tissue. examples are ferns. they have spores instead of seeds. the vascular tissue is xylem and phloem, which transport nutrients and water and allow the plants to grow tall(relatively).
yes
No , only seed plants produce seeds .
Vascular plants with flowers produce seeds inside the fruit are called angiosperm. They are plants where the flower then becomes a fruit containing the seeds.
they are seedless vascular plants
All seed plants have vascular tissue and use seeds to reproduce.
two types of vascular tissue plants are: plants without seeds and plants with seeds.