Cycads are a group of trees that have very large cones. They are a lot like conifer trees.
No. Only plants of the phylum "angiospermae" have flowers. These include flowers, fruiting plants, and many trees. However, gymnosperms (like pine trees) and cycads and many other plants have no flower. In fact, about 250 million years ago, there were no flowering plants at all!
well......cycads are only 2 or 3 cells thick the answer is cycads.
Angiosperm. Angiosperms are flowering plants, and gymnosperms (are plants with naked seeds) are mostly conifers and cycads. Basically, angiosperms are plants with flowers, gymnosperms are all other vascular seed plants that don't have flowers. (There are other plants like ferns and mosses that don't fit into either groups.) Strawberries, you probably know, have flowers. They are actually in the rose family, Rosaceae.
Gymnosperms which are plants or trees that don't produce any flowers or fruit. There are actually several types of gymnosperms: Conifers, cycads, ginkgoes, and gnetophytes. Pine trees are part of the conifers
Cycads are a group of trees that have very large cones. They are a lot like conifer trees.
No. Only plants of the phylum "angiospermae" have flowers. These include flowers, fruiting plants, and many trees. However, gymnosperms (like pine trees) and cycads and many other plants have no flower. In fact, about 250 million years ago, there were no flowering plants at all!
Yes cycads have seeds
Yes.
well......cycads are only 2 or 3 cells thick the answer is cycads.
decribe how the cones of cycads and fir trees differ
lush forests cycads -plam trees) and no grass.
Angiosperm. Angiosperms are flowering plants, and gymnosperms (are plants with naked seeds) are mostly conifers and cycads. Basically, angiosperms are plants with flowers, gymnosperms are all other vascular seed plants that don't have flowers. (There are other plants like ferns and mosses that don't fit into either groups.) Strawberries, you probably know, have flowers. They are actually in the rose family, Rosaceae.
Hugh Hamshaw Thomas has written: 'On the cuticles of some recent and fossil cycadean fronds' -- subject(s): Cycads, Cycads, Fossil, Fossil Cycads
no
Yes, they do.
Male and female