Ferns first appear in the geologic record about 360 million years ago, but many modern varieties did not appear until the flowering plants appeared, about 145 million years ago.
Ferns have many of the processes of the higher plants, but do not have either seeds or flowers. They reproduce by having spores, which are usually borne on the underside of the fronds.
These spores undergo a second form of growth called a prothallus, and this in turn produces the sperm and egg. The sperm are motile - they can locomote as long as it is wet, and they mate with an egg. After this fertilization, they produce a replica of the original parent plant.
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No. Ferns have a simple vascular system, which means they are more advanced than mosses, which do not have any vessels. Early terrestrial plants likely resembled some modern mosses.
There are ferns, fernleaf peonies, fernleaf dill, fernleaf lavender, and fernleaf biscuitroot plants. Ferns grow on every continent except Antarctica.
About 400 million years ago
Mesozoic era
as long as the dinosaurs lived
ferns
Whisk Ferns///!! BY:MR.D
Ferns are green plants.So they do have chloroplasts.
no, ferns have rhizomes
Ferns are one seedless vascular plant using spores in reproduction.
I grew up in Maine picking them & eating fiddleheads. I was told the Indians picked & ate them.My stepfather adopted Indian children.
The English surname Fearn is a variant spelling of Fern. A place name for someone who lived where there was an abundance of ferns, from Old English fearn 'fern'.
There are 20,000 species of ferns. Ferns are vascular.
ferns
Whisk Ferns///!! BY:MR.D
Ferns are green plants.So they do have chloroplasts.
Ferns are seedless vascular plants.
Ferns belong to pteridophytes
No, "ferns" is a plural noun.
no, ferns have rhizomes
Ferns are not decomposers. They are producers.
Yes they are along with sword ferns and licorice ferns