Angiosperms
Angiosperms
Flowering plants, or angiosperms, are the most recently evolved and diverse group of plants. They first appeared around 140 million years ago and have since diversified into a wide range of species, making them the dominant group of plants on Earth today.
Angiosperms
flowering plants (angiosperms). They are diverse in form and habitat, with over 350,000 known species. They have evolved various mechanisms for reproduction and adaptations to different environments, making them one of the most successful and familiar group of plants today.
Angiosperms
Angiosperms They produced seeds that are protected they are the most diverse and abundant land plants today. Present day angiosperms that evolved during the mesozic era include magnolia and oak trees.
Precambrian
Protists are a paraphyletic group because animals, fungi, and plants are the crown groups evolved from different lineages of the protists. They aren't included in the same group as protists taxonomically. This explains why the cladists consider the protist a paraphyletic group.
Bacteria came before plants. Bacteria are one of the oldest forms of life on Earth, dating back billions of years. Plants evolved much later from simpler organisms, eventually developing the ability to photosynthesize and becoming the diverse group we know today.
Yes, green algae is considered paraphyletic because it does not include all descendants of their most recent common ancestor. Green algae are a diverse group of photosynthetic organisms that include both unicellular and multicellular forms, but some descendants have evolved independently and are not included in the group.
Scientists believe that plants evolved on land from green algae, specifically from a group called charophytes. This transition from water to land occurred around 450 million years ago during the Ordovician period.
Okay first of all, humans did NOT evolve from monkeys or anything like that. So there were NO plants that became dominant as humans evolved. Evolving is for dummies!! :0)