Roots, seeds and true xylem and phloem elements are absent in non-vascular plants.
Roots, seeds and true xylem and phloem elements are absent in non-vascular plants.
They are vascular because they have tube-like structures in them that carry nutrients through the plant. NON-vascular plants have no tube-like structures so they must be close to the ground. NON-vascular plants do not have roots, but instead have rhizoids. Edited answer: Because bamboo are tall terestrial plants belong to angiosperms
There are both Vascular and Non-Vascular plants.
A rose is very much a vascular plant because it has structures such as roots, stems, leaves, and vessels to carry water and nutrients which non-vascular plants do not have. Non-vascular plants have no means of storing nutrients like flowers do and they would die quickly if they aren't in a moist environment. Vascular plants include trees, shrubs, flowers, and grasses. Non-vascular plants include mosses and algae.
It means they do have viens:)<3
vascular
Non-vascular plants do not have transport system.
Plants that lack the vascular complex, that is internal xylem structures used for stiffening and fluid transport. Such plants include the mosses and liverworts.
non-vascular means having no tublike structures!
They are vascular plants. All angiosperms, or flowering plants are vascular. Only group of plants that are non vascular is mosses.
Non-vascular plants lack a true vascular (organised tranport) system for water and sugars. i.e. they lack xylem and phloem vessels
Non-vascular plants, such as mosses and liverworts, do not have special tissues to transport water and nutrients. Instead, they anchor themselves in the soil using structures called rhizoids. Rhizoids are root-like structures that provide anchorage, help absorb water, and aid in nutrient absorption, although they do not have the same complexity and functionality as true roots found in vascular plants.