A vascular flowering seed plant has a flower (or flowers) and has a seed (or seeds).
Yes, they do in number of cases
No, not all plants have vascular tissue. Vascular plants have xylem and phloem to transport water and nutrients. Additionally, not all plants produce seeds. Seed-producing plants are divided into gymnosperms (like conifers) and angiosperms (flowering plants).
both are seed plants and seed plants share two characteristics: having vascular tissue and uses seeds to reproduce
Not all vascular plants have seeds. Some plants (like club mosses) are vascular and produce spores. For example the phylum Lycophyta are club mosses and quill-worts. these plants produce spores but still have vascular roots, stems, and one vascular vein in each leaf.
i think they are vascular??
Gymnosperms - 'naked seed'. But that does not include mosses, which are plants, but do not have true seeds. Ferns are vascular plants, but don't have seeds either.
Yes
Yes, seed plants are vascular.
They are vascular plants. All angiosperms, or flowering plants are vascular. Only group of plants that are non vascular is mosses.
Vascular and Non-Vascular
The two groups of seed-bearing plants are:-gymnosperms and angiosperms.Gymnosperm-are vascular plants that produce seeds on the scales of cones. Angiosperm-flowering plants that develop seeds enclosed in a fruit are called angiosperms.
Flowers are vascular. they have true roots.