Unlike true mosses, club mosses have vascular tissue.
Marlene Hackett
Club mosses are vascular while bryophytes (true mosses) are nonvascular.
in a lot of places like china and the galapagos.
They release spores.
seedless vascular plants
No, mosses (Bryophyta) are NOT angiosperms. Angiosperms, or flowering plants, do not include mosses, liverworts, hornworts, ferns or fern relatives, club mosses, or gymnosperms (e.g. conifers).
One moss is a DJ at a club called club Moss and the other is more like a geek your welcome :)
Club mosses are vascular while bryophytes (true mosses) are nonvascular.
beacause they are
in a lot of places like china and the galapagos.
Angiosperms have flowers, fruits and seeds. However ferns, horsetails, and club mosses do not have either of these.
Angiosperms have flowers, fruits and seeds. However ferns, horsetails, and club mosses do not have either of these.
ferns and club mosses ferns and club mosses
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.
The reproduction in ferns differs from that in mosses in that it is purely asexual. As for mosses, they reproduce both sexually and asexually.
Spores are produced by plants for propagation such as Mosses, club mosses and ferns.
they have a single vein of vascular tisse in the leaf
THEY ARE PLANTS