get a fucting life
My answer to this question is no, there can not be nonvascular seed bearing plants. Nonvascular plants are the simplest of all land dwelling plants. They lack the internal means to transport water. They do not produce seeds or flowers. Some examples of this include mosses and liverworts. Mosses reproduce by branching and breaking into pieces. They also regenerate from parts of leaves or stems, and propagate by spores. Sorry to let you down, but I hope I answered your question.
no.2
Lack true roots, stems, and leaves. It may have structures that resemble all of the above but are not "true parts". Bryophytes is one group of non-vascular plants. ex: such as mosses and liverworts, have no vascular tissue and either occur in moist locations or have special adaptations for living in dry locations. the other group is algaealgae
Nonvascular plants are low-growing, have cell walls, and do not have roots for absorbing water from the ground.Plants that don't have specialized systems on the order of xylem and phloem for moving water through internal tissues are nonvascular plants. For example, a tree's xylem is a channel for moving water and nutrients upwards through a tree. A tree's phloem is a channel for flowing the end products downwards from the photosynthetic interaction with sunlight.So nonvascular plants have no leaves, roots or stems. Their two main examples are the green algae and the bryophytes. The bryophytes include the mosses [Bryophyta], the liverworts [Marchantiophyta], and the hornworts [Anthocerotophyta]. Liverworts may appear to have leaves. But they aren't true leaves, because of the lack of vascular tissue. Instead what they have are rounded parts called lobes.
1. The vascular plants have xylem and phloem tissues for conduction 2. Plant body is differentiated into root, stem and leaves. 3. Sporophytic plant body is more pronounced and dominant.
Vascular plants have a system that allows them to transport water to all parts of its tissue. Non-vascular plants do not have this system, which means that they will generally stay smaller than vascular plants.
The difference is that vascular plants can grow very large because they have xylem and phloem to carry water, nutrients and food to all their parts. Nonvascular plants do not have xylem and phloem so each cell has to absorb water and nutrients from the soil and air.
Yes, the sensitive plant, more commonly called the TickleMe Plant, is a vascular plant.Rrelated Information:TickleMe Plants are flowering plants, producing cotton candy like pink flowers.All flowering plants are angiosperms. All angiosperms are vascular plants.Vascular plants like the TickleMe, have specialized tissue that allows the plant to circulate chemicals throughout the plant.The TickleMe Plant closes its leaves and lowers its branches when touched. This is the result of the increased pressure in its cells, made possible in part by the vascular tissue.
I believe they are vascular. Nonvascular plants need to live in a moist environment, because they don't have a sophisticated enough structure to move water efficiently to the different plant parts. Bromeliads often live in tree branches, and must get much of their water from the humidity in the air.
My answer to this question is no, there can not be nonvascular seed bearing plants. Nonvascular plants are the simplest of all land dwelling plants. They lack the internal means to transport water. They do not produce seeds or flowers. Some examples of this include mosses and liverworts. Mosses reproduce by branching and breaking into pieces. They also regenerate from parts of leaves or stems, and propagate by spores. Sorry to let you down, but I hope I answered your question.
They have no true roots, stems, or leaves, shorter because vascular tissue can transport things higher. Nonvascular plants can't transport the mineral and substances needed to survive into a tall plant. Your welcome :)
no.2
Because vascular tissue is the transport system of a plant. if a plant doesn't have vascular tissue it cant transport water and minerals to all parts of the plant if it is big. So the non-vascular plant like moss needs to be small for sufficient distribution of water and minerals etc without a transport system. eg- moss
Vascular plants are plants that have transport tissues for carrying water, nutrients, and sugar to plant cells. Because they have transport tissues, many vascular plants can become very large. An example of a vascular plant is a full grown tree. The transport tissues form a system of tubes tat extends from the roots to all parts of the plant. These tubes are made up of two kinds of tissue: xylem and phloem. Xylem tissue carries water and nutrients from the roots to the leaves. Phloem tissue carries sugar from the leaves to other cells of the plants. Non vascular plants are plants that lack tissues that transport water, nutrients, and sugar. Some example of non vascular plants are mosses, liverworts, and hornworts. Non vascular plants don't have tissues to carry the materials that cells need to stay healthy. Because of this, they don't grow very large. These plants don't have true roots to absorb water. Instead, each cell absorbs the water and nutrients it needs directly from the soil or air. Because they tend to live very close together, the cells of these plants may also get materials they need from neighboring plant cells.
They both carry minerals and food
There are three major parts of a vascular plant. They are leaves, stems, and roots. Xylem transports water and minerals in vascular plants. Phloem transports food in vascular plants.
Lack true roots, stems, and leaves. It may have structures that resemble all of the above but are not "true parts". Bryophytes is one group of non-vascular plants. ex: such as mosses and liverworts, have no vascular tissue and either occur in moist locations or have special adaptations for living in dry locations. the other group is algaealgae