Sporophyte is the dominant generation.
Seedless Vascular Plants that withhold gammets and spermers
Three groups of seedless vascular plants: Ferns, Mosses, Liverworts.
Ferns are the most commonly known seedless vascular plant, while there are also horsetails and club mosses. Liverworts are not seedless vascular plants -- they are actually nonvascular.
sex
Liverwarts
Horsetail is a seedless vascular plant. These plants produce one type of spores only.
Seedless vascular plants, such as ferns, and non-vascular plants like mosses share a reliance on water for reproduction, as both produce spores instead of seeds. They have a dominant gametophyte generation, where the gametophyte stage is the more prominent and photosynthetic part of their life cycle. However, unlike mosses, which are non-vascular and lack true roots, stems, and leaves, seedless vascular plants possess vascular tissue, allowing them to transport water and nutrients more efficiently. This difference enables seedless vascular plants to grow larger and thrive in a wider range of environments compared to mosses.
yes they are seedless vascular plants
Nonvascular plants and seedless vascular plants are both land plants that evolved from green algae. Both types also rely on water to be able to reproduce.
All vascular plants do not bear seeds. For example plants belonging to Pteridophyta are seedless and those of Gymnosperms and Angiosperms bear seeds.
Whisk ferns are seedless vascular plants that only have vascular tissues in their stem.
Carrots are only vascular plants. ferns-both mosses- seedless carrots- vascular redwoods-both liver worts- seedless horsetails- both