bird nest fern, horsetail fern, mosses and lots of other more
Equisetum arvense (field horsetail) is used medicinally. E. sylvaticum (wood horsetail) is food for horses. E. maximum (river horsetail).It belongs to the Equisetaceae family and is a relative of the fern.
mosses are nonvascular but fern are vascular
in the life cycle of a fern, the dominant and recognizable stage is the diploid sporophyte. the the younger sporophyte grows from the gametophyte.
no
The fern looks like a plant when the pine tree looks like a normal tree? (I don't weather its correct)
Marselia, Horsetail, club mosses are all relatives of ferns and belong to pteridophyta. Some close relatives are tree ferns and Birdnest fern etc.
Just the one
they all have true stemes
Diploid Sporophyte
Fertilization in a fern's life cycle occurs when sperm from the male gametophyte fertilizes an egg in the female gametophyte, usually happening after the sperm swims to the egg in a film of water.
Meiosis in ferns is responsible for producing spores, which are haploid reproductive cells. These spores develop into gametophytes, which produce gametes through mitosis. When the gametes fuse, they form a zygote that grows into a new diploid fern plant, completing the fern life cycle.