Seedless plants. They reproduce via spores.
The fungi Ferns belong to Pteridophyta group of vascular plants.
Ferns belong to the group of non-flowering plants known as vascular plants. They reproduce through spores instead of seeds and have complex vascular systems that transport water and nutrients throughout the plant.
The fungi Ferns belong to Pteridophyta group of vascular plants.
Ferns belong to the phylum Pteridophyta, which is a diverse group of vascular plants that reproduce via spores rather than seeds.
No. Angiosperms are defined as flowering plants. Ferns neither flower, fruit, or have seeds. They reproduce by releasing spores, a primitive but effective way of spreading out. They belong to the group Pteridophyta. SOURCES: <a href="http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Angiosperms">angiosperm</a>
No, ferns are not vascular plants. They belong to a group of plants known as non-vascular plants because they lack specialized tissues for transporting water and nutrients. Instead, ferns rely on diffusion to move water and nutrients throughout their structure.
Seed Ferns are an extinct group of plants that had fern-like foliage. However, they are not true ferns because unlike true ferns they did not spread spores as a means of reproduction, but seeds. Their numbers were severly reduced in the Permian period, and they were finally wiped out as a group by the end of the Cretaceous.
ferns
Ferns, and other non-seedbearing vascuar plants belong to the order Pteridophyta.
ferns
Ferns.
A horsetail is in no specific plant kingdom. It is however grouped along with several other types of plants that have xylem and phloem to transport nutrients and water around the plants but do not have seeds, called vascular seedless plants.