Plantae
yes all moss is part of the plant kingdom
Fungi are classified in its own kingdom, not under plantae.
A vascular system helps plants grow tall by transporting water and nutrients from the soil to the high branches and leaves. Moss does not need a vascular system because it is a short plant that stays in close contact to it's nutrients/soil
There are one-celled organisms classified in the plant kingdom. The popular ones are protists which are classified as animals as well as plants.
No. Moss is one of the first plants to arrive in the plant kingdom, being multicellular and non vascular. (Meaning they have no blood vessels) It belongs in the plant kingdom in the division Bryophyta.
yes all moss is part of the plant kingdom
Ball sack
Hair-cap mosses comprise the genus Polytrichum of the order Polytrichales. Both the genus and common name of these mosses make reference to the hairy calyptracharacteristic of the sporophyte capsules (sporangia)
There are about 12,000 different species of moss in the World. All species of moss are in the kingdom of Plantae.
nonvascular plant
They are not classified into a kingdom as they are not alive.
Bryophyta, 12000 species of moss are classified here
it belongs to the fungi kingdom
Algea is classified into "Protista"(Protoctista) kingdom.
No. Moss is a member of the plant kingdom the words vertebrate or invertebrate only apply to the animal kingdom
it belongs to the fungi kingdom
Arthropods are classified in the animal kingdom (Animalia, or Metazoa).