Seedless plants were most diverse during the Devonian period, approximately 419 to 359 million years ago. This era is often referred to as the "Age of Plants," as it saw the emergence and diversification of various groups of vascular plants, including ferns and horsetails. The warm, moist climate of the Devonian facilitated their growth and spread across terrestrial environments.
Seedless Vascular Plants that withhold gammets and spermers
Horsetail is a seedless vascular plant. These plants produce one type of spores only.
sex
Carrots are only vascular plants. ferns-both mosses- seedless carrots- vascular redwoods-both liver worts- seedless horsetails- both
Whisk ferns are seedless vascular plants that only have vascular tissues in their stem.
Three groups of seedless vascular plants: Ferns, Mosses, Liverworts.
Ferns are the most commonly known seedless vascular plant, while there are also horsetails and club mosses. Liverworts are not seedless vascular plants -- they are actually nonvascular.
no, a liverwort is a seedless nonvascular plant
All trees are vascular
yes they are seedless vascular plants
Pteridophytes or Pteridophyta describes seedless, vascular plants that use spores to reproduce.