primula
All flowering plants flower to attract pollinators to help to produce either fruit or seeds, so your question is difficult to give an answer to. If you can be a bit more specific I'll try to help.
it is about the plants that always flowers
There are 11 main phyla of non-flowering plants, including mosses and club mosses. Though some plants are called mosses (e.g. scotch moss), these flowering plants aren't true mosses.
Flowering plants are called angiosperms. They reproduce by forming flowers that contain reproductive structures necessary for fertilization, such as pollen and ovules. Angiosperms are the most diverse group of plants and include all flowering plants.
the name is called dandlion
Cryptogames
Angiosperms are also called flowering plants or fruting plants, and they produce their seeds in enclosures - typically fruits or flowers.
No, cryptograms are not flowering plants. Cryptograms are a group of non-vascular plants that reproduce by spores, including mosses, liverworts, and hornworts. They do not produce flowers or seeds like flowering plants.
You get both flowering plants and non-flowering plants; non-flowering are things like mosses, ferns and liverworts which produce spore, flowering plants produce seeds
There are two types of flowering plants. These two types of flowering plants are the perennials and the annual flowering plants.
Yes, that is correct. Flowering plants, also known as angiosperms, are the most numerous group of seed-producing plants on Earth. They are characterized by the presence of flowers, which are reproductive structures that produce seeds enclosed within a fruit.
Flowering plants are called angiosperms and overtime as climate changes plants must adapt and change to the environment. So over millions of years plants will look different.