There are several characteristics that can help to identify a plant as a horsetail. Horsetails are vascular plants with hollow, jointed stems. They are seedless and have scale-like leaves arranged in a whorl pattern.
Horsetail is a plant that reproduces by releasing spores. It is not considered to be an angiosperm or a gymnosperm.
I think so - I would usually classify a house plant as an object. But the houseplant is clearly living.
Any hybrid. There are billions of them. New plants are developed every day by botanists who will hand pollinate one plant with a different plant in the same family. The result is (hopefully) a new plant with the best characteristics of each donor plant, or a bloom/fruit that is better than the original.
Early classification was probably begun to determine whether a plant or animal was harmful or beneficial to a person. Aristotle grouped organisms into two types, plant and animal, and animals were divided into three groups determined by how they moved.
You hae to go back to the Cerulean City Gym, go around the back, find the generator part inside some inner tubes, THEN go back to the Power Plant and give the part to the man in charge.
A horsetail is a Vascular plant.
No flowers
No flowers
sorry i dont no guy
Horsetail is a plant that reproduces by releasing spores. It is not considered to be an angiosperm or a gymnosperm.
In alasca
No flowers
A horsetail is a type of plant and all plants are producers which are eaten by consumers.
Horsetail is a seedless vascular plant. These plants produce one type of spores only.
yes. there is
According to the alternation of generations life cycle when you look at a horsetail plant body you are looking at the sporophytic plant body.
Horsetail, also known as Equisetum, is a perennial plant that resembles a small green horsetail with segmented stems. It is commonly found near water sources and has been used in traditional medicine for its diuretic and antioxidant properties. Horsetail is also used in gardening as a natural remedy for controlling pests and promoting plant growth.