the international supporting system through which water, minerals, and food move inside the plant is called
No. Conifers are Gymnosperms.
One main difference is that gymnosperms typically rely on wind for pollination, while angiosperms often rely on animals like bees for pollination. Additionally, gymnosperms have exposed seeds, while angiosperms have seeds enclosed within a fruit. Finally, gymnosperms do not produce flowers, while angiosperms do.
Angiosperms (flowering plants) and gymnosperms (conifers, cycads, ginkgo) are two groups of vascular plants that produce seeds. Angiosperms have seeds enclosed within a fruit, while gymnosperms have seeds not enclosed, usually in cones.
Angiosperms are characterized by enclosed seeds within a fruit, while gymnosperms have exposed seeds on the surface of scales or cones. Angiosperms have flowers for reproduction, while gymnosperms have cones. Additionally, angiosperms have vessels in their xylem, while gymnosperms have tracheids. These are the main characteristics used to differentiate between angiosperms and gymnosperms.
Hibiscus flowers are angiosperms, which means they are flowering plants that produce seeds enclosed within a fruit. Gymnosperms, on the other hand, are plants that have naked seeds, without a protective fruit covering.
Gymnosperms have cones and angiosperms have flowers/fruits
Gymnosperms have cones and angiosperms have flowers/fruits
Yes, both gymnosperms and angiosperms are seed-producing plants. However, gymnosperms do not produce flowers, which is a characteristic unique to angiosperms.
gymnosperms and angiosperms
The difference between gymnosperms and angiosperms is that gymnosperms develop cones as their seed to use in the fertilization process, and angiosperms produce flowers and fruits as their seed to use in the fertilization process.
No. Conifers are Gymnosperms.
One thing that is similar about angiosperms and gymnosperms is that they are both plants. They also both produce something, like flowers or cones.
Alternation of generations is the same in all plants in the sense that during sexual reproduction gametophytic generation alters with the sporophytic generation. In angiosperms and gymnosperms the only difference is the presence of embryo sac in the ovule in place of archegonium in gymnosperms. Also double fertilization takes place in angiosperms to have sporophytic endosperm, which remains gametophytic in gymnosperms.
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angiosperm
No
gymnosperms and angiosperms