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One moss is a DJ at a club called club Moss and the other is more like a geek your welcome :)

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Alexandrine Nienow

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2y ago
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11y ago

club moss, name generally used for the living species of the class Lycopodiopsida, a primitive subdivision of vascular plants. The Lycopodiopsida were a dominant plant group in the Carboniferous period, when they attained the size of trees, and contributed to the coal deposits then being formed. They are now considered relictual. Although they resemble the mosses, they are considered to be evolutionarily more advanced because they are vascular, that is they have specialized fluid-conducting tissues. Club mosses are usually creeping or epiphytic and often inhabit moist places, especially in tropical and subtropical forests. They reproduce by means of spores, either clustered into small cones or borne in the axils of the small scalelike leaves. The principal genera are Lycopodium and Selaginella. Some species of Lycopodium are called ground pine or creeping cedar, especially those that resemble miniature hemlocks with flattened fan-shaped branches, and are often used for Christmas decorations. The spores of L. clavatum are gathered and sold as lycopodium powder, or vegetable sulfur, a highly inflammable yellow powder sometimes used for pharmaceutical purposes (e.g., as an absorptive powder) and in fireworks. Selaginella species, often incorrectly called Lycopodium, are occasionally grown as ornamentals. One of the best known is a resurrection plant. Club mosses constitute the division Lycopodiophyta, class Lycopodiopsida.

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9y ago

Club mosses are vascular plants with erect stems that bear spores in club-shaped, cone-like structures. And True mosses are non-vascular plants which have simple leaflike, rootlike, and stem like parts. They're not true leaves, roots, or stems because they lack vascular tissues.

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14y ago

Well, for one thing, a club moss isn't really a moss at all.

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11y ago

Mosses belong to bryophyta (non-vascular plants), whereas club mosses are in Pteridophyta (Vascular plants).

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10y ago

I think it would be spores.

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Q: In what ways mosses and club mosses differ?
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Related questions

How do mosses and club mosses differ?

Unlike true mosses, club mosses have vascular tissue.


What Ways do mosses and club mosses differ from each other?

One moss is a DJ at a club called club Moss and the other is more like a geek your welcome :)


How are club mosses different from true mosses?

Club mosses are vascular while bryophytes (true mosses) are nonvascular.


In what ways do club mosses and mosses differ from each other?

Club mosses are vascular plants with erect stems that bear spores in club-shaped, cone-like structures. And True mosses are non-vascular plants which have simple leaflike, rootlike, and stem like parts. They're not true leaves, roots, or stems because they lack vascular tissues.


How are mosses and club mosses similar?

beacause they are


How are Horsetails ferns and club mosses different from mosses?

Angiosperms have flowers, fruits and seeds. However ferns, horsetails, and club mosses do not have either of these.


How are ferns horsetails and club mosses different from mosses?

Angiosperms have flowers, fruits and seeds. However ferns, horsetails, and club mosses do not have either of these.


What are club mosses?

in a lot of places like china and the galapagos.


Where would you find pteridophytes?

ferns and club mosses ferns and club mosses


In what ways are mosses liverworts hornworts similar In what ways are they differ?

The three major groups of nonvascular plants are mosses, liverworts, and hornworts. These low-growing plants live in moist environments where they can absorb water and other nutrients directly from their environment.


How does reproduction in ferns differ from that in mosses?

The reproduction in ferns differs from that in mosses in that it is purely asexual. As for mosses, they reproduce both sexually and asexually.


What are examples of a spore?

Spores are produced by plants for propagation such as Mosses, club mosses and ferns.