No, liverworts, hornworts and mosses are bryophytes or non vascular plants. That is why the are small and flat - no vascular system to transport water and nutrients, all nutrients must be passed cell to cell by diffusion.
Corn is a vascular plant. Everything is vascular, except liverworts and mosses.
no, a liverwort is a seedless nonvascular plant
Plants such as the mosses, liverworts, and hornworts.
Liverworts lack a vascular system. They are non-vascular plants that absorb water and nutrients directly through their cells. Ferns, peanut plants, and oak trees all have vascular systems that transport water and nutrients throughout the plant.
Liverworts are not vascular plants. The Liverwort is a very primitive plant like moss and the slime mold. Liverwort reproduces using spores.
Hornworts are non-vascular seedless plants they also lack vascular tissue such as moss, and liverworts
yes
nonvascular
The vascular plants are differentiated in to root and shoot having conducting tissue in the form of xylem and phloem whereas mosses and liverworts have rhizoides in place of roots and lack xylem and phloem.
I dont realy know
A plant without vascular tissue is known as a non-vascular plant. These plants rely on osmosis and diffusion to transport water, nutrients, and other substances throughout their bodies. Examples include mosses and liverworts.
Vascular plants have specialized tissues that transport water and nutrients throughout the plant, while non-vascular plants do not have these tissues and rely on diffusion for nutrient transport. Vascular plants tend to be larger and more complex in structure, while non-vascular plants are typically smaller and simpler, like mosses and liverworts. Vascular plants include ferns, conifers, and flowering plants, while non-vascular plants include mosses, liverworts, and hornworts.