Yes cycads have seeds
well......cycads are only 2 or 3 cells thick the answer is cycads.
Hadrosaurs were able to eat tough vegetation because of the adaptations that allowed them to chew. Plants they ate may have included conifers, cycads, ferns, horsetails, and early grasses.
Hugh Hamshaw Thomas has written: 'On the cuticles of some recent and fossil cycadean fronds' -- subject(s): Cycads, Cycads, Fossil, Fossil Cycads
no
Cycads are gymnosperms with seeds borne in cones, while ferns are vascular plants that reproduce via spores. Cycads have a woody trunk topped with large compound leaves, while ferns have fronds that unfurl from a central stem. Cycads are mainly found in tropical and subtropical regions, while ferns can be found in a variety of habitats worldwide.
Cycads are a group of trees that have very large cones. They are a lot like conifer trees.
Yes, they do.
Male and female
In the Triassic period
conifers
Cordaites