The spores help the plant to reproduce.
The tiny dots found on the underside of the bird's nest fern are the fern's spores. These spores are a part of the fern's reproductive process and will eventually mature into new fern plants.
Bird's nest fern reproduce by producing spores.
No, bird nest fern reproduce from spores so it is never a flowering plant
Bird's nest ferns do not produce flowers in the common way that other plants do. Instead, they reproduce through spores that typically form on the underside of the fronds. These spores can eventually develop into new fern plants.
To propagate a birds nest fern, you can divide the plant at the root ball or by using spores. Divide the plant carefully, ensuring each new section has roots attached. For spores, collect them from the underside of mature fronds and plant them in a moist, sterile growing medium. Keep the new plants in a warm, humid environment to encourage growth.
In tropical rain forests it is found as epiphyte on trees. Since the older leaves of this fern form a nest like structure it is called Birds' nest fern.
STOMATA
spores , mabe
The Birds Nest Fern reproduces via spores, which are released from sporangia on the undersides of its fronds. In contrast, Morning Glory plants reproduce sexually through flowers that produce seeds after pollination, typically involving insects for fertilization. While the Birds Nest Fern relies on asexual reproduction through spore dispersal, Morning Glory plants primarily propagate through seed formation, facilitating genetic variation in their offspring.
Asplenium sp.
yes.but short stem
It didn't really get onto a tree. When the wind blows, the spores underneath the leaves of the bird's nest fern will be blown to other places. In this case the spore landed on the tree when the wind blew, then with the suitable conditions such as moisture, the the spore gradually grows into a bird's nest fern, this is the reason it is located on a tree.