Ferns produce spores. They do not produce seeds.
A fern grows from a fern spore.
It is seed producing.
ferns are spore-producing :) !
Spore
A grass is not a spore-producing plant. It is grown from various types of grass seed like many other plants commonly found in landscaping's.
A grass is not a spore-producing plant. It is grown from various types of grass seed like many other plants commonly found in landscaping's.
No, red light does not promote fern spore germination. Fern spores typically require moisture, suitable temperature, and suitable substrate for germination to occur. Light quality may have some effect on the process, but it is not a primary factor.
A new fern.
A spore grows into a heart shaped gametophyte. The gametophytes produces sex cells that unite to form a zygote. The zygote grows into a spore producing sporophyte.
Spore producing organisms are what form part of the life cycles of many bacteria, plants, algae, fungi and some protozoa. All plants will reproduce by either seed or spores, essentially.
A spore is a spore. It is produced on a plant that does not produce seed.
Ferns don't produce seeds. Ferns reproduce through Spores which are produced on fertile fronds (leaves) which are distinguishable by the dark usually circular patches on the underside. The spore is like the seed of a flowering plant, in that it is the way the fern reproduces and spreads. A spore, however, is different in that it is a single cell that has only one copy of each chromosome (haploid), and a seed is multicellular and has two (diploid). The spore develops into a plant called a gametophyte that can produce both sperm and eggs. These unite in the processes called fertilization, producing a "baby" fern called a zygote, which now has two copies of each chromosome (it is diploid). By normal cell division, this grows into the fern plant as we know it.