Mosses and liverworts are non-vascular. Horsetails are vascular plants.
Yes.
Horses, as other consumers, eat plants, which also makes them herbivores. They are also primary consumers that are considered grazers along with deer, cows, and elephants.
Yes, most are wind pollinated but many have fairly large insect pollinated flowers. Deciduous trees with noticable flowers include, magnolias, laburnum, horse chestnuts, apple, cherries and lilacs.
Charley Horse
The Horse has a complex cell system and also has a cell nucleus so therefore it is a Eukaryote.
Plants with soft stems are known as herbaceous plants. They have soft, green stems that contain little or no wood. Some examples of this type of plant are: grapevines, ferns, grasses, ivies and tulips.
It depends on what plants the horse is allergic to.
The spore bearing structures in club mosses and horsetails and the cones of gymnosperms called strobili.
Some homonyms of "hoarse" include "horse" and "horrse" (a misspelling of "horse").
A horse eats grass or hay and no animals.
No. A horse is a herbivore, so it can only eat plants.
The United States is the largest producer and exporter of horse meat, with 15 horse slaughter plants.
horse manure is good for the ground and helps plants grow.
A horse is a consumer. It is a primary consumer because it eats producers -- plants
Horses effect plants and animals in many ways. I will tell you a few. A horse eats plants- mainly weeds. If there is too much of a plant the animal(human) might like the horse to eat the plant. Of course- you would have to make sure the horse is unbridled and the plant is safe for horse consumption. Sometimes a horse will eat plants that other animals depend on . Sometimes that animal Is harmful and sometimes It is helpful. Horses effect plants and animals in many way.
horse manure is good for the ground and helps plants grow.
No. It is illegal to slaughter a horse in the united states. It is a horrible thing in my eyes.
Since 2006 after Congress banned horse slaughter in the United States all horse slaughter plants have closed. But these horses that were once killed in the US are now shipped to other countries such as Mexico.