/give them water to drink
the "leaf" of a fern is called a frond.
Most of the middle Himalayan hills are dominated by narrow leaf conifers, mosses and ferns.
Yes, ferns, depending on the type can be compound, or doubly compound.
The spores of ferns are produce in sporangia.These sporangia are present at the back side of sporophyll(leaf let).
Spores develop on the underside of the fern leaf, and is spread by the wind.
The poppy should be worn on the left hand side.The leaf should be worn at the 11 o'clock position to signify the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month...the day war ended and the day we all remember.
leaf shape is the answer.
Periwinkle leaf is a simple leaf. A simple leaf has a single leaf blade that is not divided into small leaflets. The simple leaf may have incisions, but these incisions are not deep enough to divide the leaf into leaflets.
In the case of the tree ferns (Cyathea spp) in New Zealand, the fern leaf canopy may be elevated up to 10m. This has obvious value in gathering sunlight for photosynthesis.
The frond or leaf grows directly from the root system as ferns do not have a true stem
No; liverworts do not have leaves. The massive compound leaves in some ferns and gymnosperms are called fronds.
The brown things underneath the leaf of a fern plat are spores.They a reproductive cells that blow away to plant new plants.They are on every leaf you see