Want this question answered?
Club mosses are vascular while bryophytes (true mosses) are nonvascular.
Unlike true mosses, club mosses have vascular tissue.
Ferns have vascular tissues in the form of xylem and phloem and gametophytic stage dependent on the sporophytic plant body; mosses are lacking xylem & phloem and have sporophytic stage dependent on the gametophytic plant body in the form of capsules.
Moss spreads by a variety of methods. Most species produce small capsules above the leafy part of the plant containing spores. These spores are easily dispersed by wind, water or traffic. After coming into contact with soil, they germinate and form a plant-like structure that is the first stage in the development of moss. Moisture and minerals are absorbed by rhizoids (similar to roots) and produce new buds which give rise to new stems.
Mosses make up a huge group of plants known formally as the Bryophyta. In terms of taxonomic organization (the way biologists organize organisms into groups of related species) all plants are in the kingdom Plantae. The kingdom is then broken down into divisions, which are broken into classes, then orders, then families, then genera, then finally species. Bryophyta is a division, so we can see that mosses branch off from all other plants very early on both in terms of taxonomy and evolution. The bryophytes are the true mosses, and, as such, they are non-vascular, seedless plants (all non-vascular plants are seedless). They are closely related to hornworts and liverworts, but only distantly related to club mosses.
Club mosses are vascular while bryophytes (true mosses) are nonvascular.
Unlike true mosses, club mosses have vascular tissue.
they all have true stemes
they all have true stemes
Club mosses are vascular plants with erect stems that bear spores in club-shaped, cone-like structures. And True mosses are non-vascular plants which have simple leaflike, rootlike, and stem like parts. They're not true leaves, roots, or stems because they lack vascular tissues.
No, that is a lie.
No, you will not actually grow taller but you will appear taller because you are slimmer.
True mosses are non-vascular plants which have simple leaflike, rootlike, and stem like parts. They're not true leaves, roots, or stems because they lack vascular tissues. Mosses and liverworts are referred to as bryophytes, which means "mosslike plants".Club mosses are vascular plants with erect stems that bear spores in club-shaped, cone-like structures. Club mosses are also called "ground pine" because they grow along the ground in temperate regions and superficially resemble miniature pines.
true ( a+ )
Yes it is true, because you will gain extra calcium from the duration of the mitosis from the year and it will cause you to grow taller.
True
they can grow taller