yes, the gametophyte generation of a moss is haploid. While the sporophyte generation of a moss is diploid.
The generation that undergoes mitosis in the sporic life cycle is the haploid gametophyte generation. This generation produces gametes through mitosis which will fuse during fertilization to form a diploid zygote.
The haploid phase that produces gametes by mitosis in the life cycle of a plant is the gametophyte generation. The gametophyte produces gametes (eggs and sperm) through mitosis, which fuse during fertilization to form a diploid zygote that develops into a new sporophyte plant.
The gametophyte generation of fern plants is the haploid generation. It produces gametes (eggs and sperm) through mitosis. When the gametes fuse during fertilization, they form a diploid zygote that develops into the sporophyte generation.
Nucellus and MMC are and generally diploid and functional megaspore and female gametophyte are haploid in nature.
The life cycle of nonvascular plants includes an alternation of generations between a gametophyte and a sporophyte. The gametophyte generation produces gametes (eggs and sperm) through mitosis, which then fuse to form a zygote that develops into the sporophyte generation through mitosis. The sporophyte produces spores through meiosis that develop into new gametophytes.
The cells of a fern plant that you see are diploid. Ferns have a lifecycle which alternates between a diploid sporophyte generation and a haploid gametophyte generation. The visible fern plant is the diploid sporophyte generation.
Gametophyte-haploid Sporophyte-diploid
Some types of algae that show a distinct alternation of generations are members of the green algae group, such as Ulva and Spirogyra. These algae have a haploid gametophyte generation and a diploid sporophyte generation. The gametophyte generation produces haploid gametes that fuse to form a diploid zygote, which develops into the sporophyte generation that produces haploid spores.
The generation that undergoes mitosis in the sporic life cycle is the haploid gametophyte generation. This generation produces gametes through mitosis which will fuse during fertilization to form a diploid zygote.
sporophyte and gametophye. since plants have alternation of generation, both are multicellular (haploid and diploid)
The haploid phase that produces gametes by mitosis in the life cycle of a plant is the gametophyte generation. The gametophyte produces gametes (eggs and sperm) through mitosis, which fuse during fertilization to form a diploid zygote that develops into a new sporophyte plant.
A sporophyte is the diploid form and a gametophyte is haploid form.
It is a type of life cycle found in some algae, fungi, and all plants where an organism alternates between a haploid (n) gametophyte generation and a diploid (2n) sporophyte generation. A diploid plant (sporophyte) produces, by meiosis, a spore that gives rise to a multicellular, haploid pollen grain (gametophyte). It once was called hydrogen power. In more simple terms, it is a life cycle in which there is both a multicellular diploid form, and a multicellular haploid form.
The gametophyte generation of fern plants is the haploid generation. It produces gametes (eggs and sperm) through mitosis. When the gametes fuse during fertilization, they form a diploid zygote that develops into the sporophyte generation.
Nucellus and MMC are and generally diploid and functional megaspore and female gametophyte are haploid in nature.
The life cycle of nonvascular plants includes an alternation of generations between a gametophyte and a sporophyte. The gametophyte generation produces gametes (eggs and sperm) through mitosis, which then fuse to form a zygote that develops into the sporophyte generation through mitosis. The sporophyte produces spores through meiosis that develop into new gametophytes.
gametophyte