Second generation produced in mosses is sporophyte on the gametophytic plant body.
Gametophyte
Mosses do not have flowers; instead they bear capsules to produce spores.
In a typical Mendel experiment, Mendel took two purebreeding lines (the parental generation) and crossed them to produce the 1st filial generation and sometimes would self cross these to produce the 2nd filial generation.
Horsetails produce seeds while mosses, ferns, and conifers produce spores.
The first generation of mosses starts with germination of spores to develop into gametophyte. The male and female gametophytes produce anthridia and archegonia. Motile antherozoids are released from anthridia and make their way to archegonia through water. The egg inside archegonium is fertilized to form the zygote. The zygote develops into a sporophyte, which remain dependent on the gametophyte.
P1 stands for "parental generation." This refers to the parents (mom and dad) who start off the pedigree. The P1 generation can then produce offspring (called the F1, or "first filial generation"). The F1 generation could then produce the F2 generation (or "second filial generation").
Yes. Autotrophs produce their own food, usually by photosynthesis. Mosses are green plants that can produce their own food from sunlight by photosynthesis.
No mosses have flowers they are non-flowering plants.
The sporophyte generation is dominant in ferns.
Mosses and ferns.
Yes- All Bryophytes produce fruit like structures
Mosses and ferns do not produce seeds; they are referred to as "seedless" plants, instead producing easily-damaged spores in great numbers for reproduction.