Yes, I can help you identify different types of ferns. Ferns can be classified into various categories based on their characteristics such as size, shape, and frond structure. Some common types of ferns include sword ferns, maidenhair ferns, and bird's nest ferns. Each type of fern has unique features that can help you distinguish them from one another.
Because ferns (Pteridophyta) and gymnosperms are part of the larger category of vascular plants (Tracheophyta) and share common features that mosses lack. Perhaps also because of the spurious notion that "seed ferns" (Pteridospermatophyta), the ancestors of the gymnosperms, evolved from ferns. In fact, "seed ferns" are a large, heterogeneous category of plants which are generally believed to be only distantly related to true ferns.
Because It's Gucci. - E
The feature between conifers and ferns are that they both are vascular plants the grown in a humid temperate environment. They differ in that a conifer is a seed producing plant and the fern more primitive reproduces with spores.
There are 20,000 species of ferns. Ferns are vascular.
What_is_the_scientific_name_of_a_fern_plant"Fern" is a generic term used to describe a group of plants with common physical and biological features; the question is the same as asking "What is the scientific name of a tree". There are hundreds if not thousands of different types of ferns, the question needs to be more specific.HOWEVER, most "ferns" belong to the plant Division: Pteridophyta, but that is as far as the taxonomy can be taken without more information.
Ferns are green plants.So they do have chloroplasts.
Ferns are seedless vascular plants.
Ferns belong to pteridophytes
No, "ferns" is a plural noun.
Ferns are not decomposers. They are producers.
Yes they are along with sword ferns and licorice ferns