The uncurled leaves of a fern are called fronds. A fern is a autotroph. Ferns need to release their spores into moist environments in order for reproduction to occur.
Fern leaves can certainly be called "fern leaves" but they are more often called "fronds".
Circinate vernation of the young emerging leaves
The curled up fronds of a fern are called their leaves. Its really a long stem with many little leaves coming out of it.
The leaf of a fern is called a frond. A young frond is referred to as a fiddlehead. When young fronds come up from the ground, they're tightly coiled.
A koru is the shape of the fern frond before it opens up. A smaller 'koru' that grows from the fern frond is called koiri.
A cone (n) is a shape whose base is a circle and whose sides taper up to a point. A frond (n) is a compound leaf of a fern or palm or cycad.
A cone (n) is a shape whose base is a circle and whose sides taper up to a point. A frond (n) is a compound leaf of a fern or palm or cycad.
The bloody scene curled my hair. The housecat was snugly curled up by the fireplace.
yes because real werewolves wake up in curled up possesions. it helps them in life.
to sleep curled up means to be in a circle form with a blanket and children have little stuffed animals
curled up
in a burrow curled up
the sleep curled up
Ferns mainly consist of 5 parts for its structure which are the Stems, Leaves Roots, Prothallus, and Rhizoids. Stems: the fern stems are called Rhizome and it grows horizontally under the surface of the soil. Some such as the above ground creeping stolon grows up till 20 m. Leaves: the fern leaves are called fronds. The new fern leaves are curled but as they grow bigger they slowly uncurl and form a fern plant. Roots: the underground non-photosynthetic structures that take up water and nutrients from soil. They are always fibrous and are structurally very similar to the roots of seed plants. Prothallus: A green, photosynthetic structure that is one cell thick, usually heart or kidney shaped, 3-10 mm long and 2-8 mm broad. Rhizoids: root-like structures (not true roots) that consist of single cells, water and mineral salts are absorbed over the whole structure.