Once the phylum of Bryophyta is reached the establishment of the other classification categories requires more specific information.
Kingdom: Plantae
Phylum: Bryophyta
Class: Multiple
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
Mosses belong to Plantae. So it have mitochondria
YES
Yes, there are more than 12,000 species of ferns alive tody. There are relatively few species of club mosses today.
they are non vascular plants, another example would be hornwarts. i hope this helps :)
I don't think so because in my science text book it states that mosses and lichens are the first organisms to start growing in an environment again and pioneer species have to be the first species to arrive. After the mosses grow then die decaying matter builds up on them and other plants can grow. Hope this helped :)
Mosses are brypohytes (br-eye-yo-fights). They are plants. So the taxonomy (which is what you are asking about ) would be: Kingdom: plants, division: bryophytes, classes: takakiopsida, sphagnopsid, andreaeopsida, andreaeobryopsida, polytrichopsida, bryopsida, family: a subset of the above, genus: you can look it up, species - that is very "specific" (get it?)... You can buy sphagnum moss at most nurseries...
Mosses belong to Plantae. So it have mitochondria
The possessive form of the plural noun mosses is mosses'.Example: Write the mosses' species on the label for each.
True mosses belong to the phylum Bryophyta. They are simple, non-vascular plants that reproduce via spores and are commonly found in moist environments.
Division Anthocerotophyta: Hornworts Division Bryophyta: Mosses Division Lycophyta: Club Mosses; Scale Trees Division Hepaticophyta: Liverworts Division Pteridopsida: Ferns Division Tracheophyta: Vascular Plants (Largest Division) Division Sphenopsida: Horsetails
YES
There are 358 species and varieties of mosses in Minnesota. See related links for information about where to find some of the difference species in the state.
Mosses belong to the Bryophyte organisms
Yes, there are more than 12,000 species of ferns alive tody. There are relatively few species of club mosses today.
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.
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.
mosses and lichens