Angiosperms, or flowering plants, possess two unique features: flowers and fruit. Flowers facilitate sexual reproduction by attracting pollinators and facilitating the transfer of pollen, while fruit protects the developing seeds and aids in their dispersal. These characteristics distinguish angiosperms from other plant groups, such as gymnosperms, ferns, and mosses.
it doesnt really do anything in the plant, its a group that you can classify a plant in.
Some examples of angiosperms are grass, corn, wheat, and rice. Other examples include beans, rose bush, and a carrot plant.
angiosperms
Angiosperms
Flowers!
Wolfia and Lemna are the smallest angiosperms
Fungi and Angiosperms
A hornwort plant is neither an angiosperm nor a gymnosperm. It is a non-vascular plant belonging to the division Anthocerotophyta, which is separate from both angiosperms and gymnosperms.
Very much so! The plants that have flower, angiosperms, take in CO2 and with sunlight a water turn it into C6H12O6 basically. With this, glucose and it polysaccharides they buid the plant, among the other things they do with glucose.
Angiosperms like Utricularia and Napenthes eat the insects.
yes, because they are a flowering plant.
Angiosperms do.