Depends if you are talking about a non-vascular plant like moss.
It must be vascular because the pictures show it to be a tall flowering plant. All nonvascular plants are small and grow close to the ground since they lack phloem and xylem
daisyis Nonvascular.
Nonvascular plants have stems
Yes. Very few plants are nonvascular, but a dogwood is definitely vascular.
nonvascular
Nonvascular
Within vascular plants is the phloem, the vessel that transports food, and the xylem, which transports water. Nonvascular plants are small, simple plants without a vascular system. They do not have a phloem or xylem.
No, a liverwort is nonvascular :)
Nonvascular plants are small because they lack the vascular tissues (xylem and phloem) needed to transport water and nutrients efficiently throughout their structures. Without these tissues, nonvascular plants are limited in their ability to grow larger and more complex structures.
Mosses form the largest group of nonvascular plants. They are small, herbaceous plants that lack specialized tissues for water and nutrient transport like vascular plants do. Mosses typically grow in moist environments and play important roles in ecosystem functions.
Because they do not have any tissue for carrying materials throughout the plant
The female gametophyte structure that produces eggs in nonvascular plants are called archegonia. The male structure that produces sperm are called antheridia. A gametophyte is the part of the plant that is responsible for creating gametes AKA sexual reproductive cell (sperm or egg). A nonvascular plant is a plant that isn't capable of transporting water and nutrients throughout itself very far because it lacks the proper vessels and veins for the transport. This causes these plants to be small in size so the plant doesn't have to transport the water and nutrients very far.