The phylum is Bryophyta.
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It depends: Antherocerophyta - hornworts Hepatophyta - Liverworts Bryophyta - All other mosses
Plantae Bryophyta Musci Polytrichaceae Polytrichum
Ferns have a dominant sporophyte and a reduced gametophyte. As for moss, it depends on the type. If referring to mosses under the phylum Bryophyta (these are the nonvascular mosses) they have a dominant gametophyte. If referring to mosses under seedless vascular category, such as club mosses in the phylum Lycophyta, these plants have a dominant sporophyte and a reduced gametophyte.
There is no plant phylum. The order of taxonomy is Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus and species. Plants are all in the kingdom Plantae, and there are many phyla under the Plantae.
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...
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.
Echinoderms are the phylum. The phylum is Echinodermata Echinoderms are the phylum. The phylum is Echinodermata Echinoderms are the phylum. The phylum is Echinodermata
A lichen is a plant, usually an alga, and a fungus living symbiotically. Moss is a common name for the Bryophytes, a phylum of usually small plants with a distinctive life cycle. Lichens and moss, though often found in similar environments, aren't really related.
The toucans phylum is phylum Chordata.
Phylum Aschelminthes
This depends if it is a true moss, a plant we call 'moss', or decorative moss.