Yes; all the unicelullar, colonial and filamentous algae, members of fungi and liverworts are without stem, root and leaf.
Riccia, Marchantia, Anthoceros, Plagiochasma, Asterellaetc. are the examples of Liverworts.
yes
Yes, but they dont have flowers, they have what is called "naked" seeds
Plants such as the mosses, liverworts, and hornworts.
clearly differentiated stem and leaves. -JH.
Yes; all the unicelullar, colonial and filamentous algae, members of fungi and liverworts are without stem, root and leaf.
Liverworts!
liverworts
liverworts do not have roots, flowers or sterms
Botanically, mosses are bryophytes, or non-vascular plants. They can be distinguished from the apparently similar liverworts (Merchantiophyta or Hepaticae) by their multi-cellular rhizoids. Other differences are not universal for all mosses and all liverworts, but the presence of clearly differentiated "stem" and "leaves", the lack of deeply lobed or segmented leaves, and the absence of leaves arranged in three ranks, all point to the plant being a moss. They both are considered, by botanists, to be bryophytes.
The liverworts and the hornworts are non seed plants.
Riccia, Marchantia, Anthoceros, Plagiochasma, Asterellaetc. are the examples of Liverworts.
yes
Yes, but they dont have flowers, they have what is called "naked" seeds
Plants such as the mosses, liverworts, and hornworts.
on the ground