because one has a tube in it and others do not
Vascular plants have specialized tissues for conducting water and nutrients, allowing them to grow taller and thicker. Mosses lack these tissues, limiting their growth potential. Additionally, vascular plants have evolved to invest more resources in structures that support height and thickness, such as lignin-rich cell walls and woody tissues.
Unlike true mosses, club mosses have vascular tissue.
Vascular plants include ferns, flowering plants, and gymnosperms, which have specialized tissues for water and nutrient transport. Nonvascular plants, such as mosses and liverworts, lack these specialized tissues and rely on osmosis and diffusion to transport water and nutrients throughout the plant.
No, mosses do not have secondary growth like vascular plants. They lack the vascular tissues needed for secondary growth, such as xylem and phloem, which are responsible for transporting water and nutrients throughout the plant. Mosses rely on diffusion to transport water and nutrients, limiting their size and complexity.
Vascular plants have specialized tissues that transport water and nutrients throughout the plant, while non-vascular plants do not have these tissues and rely on diffusion for nutrient transport. Vascular plants tend to be larger and more complex in structure, while non-vascular plants are typically smaller and simpler, like mosses and liverworts. Vascular plants include ferns, conifers, and flowering plants, while non-vascular plants include mosses, liverworts, and hornworts.
Vascular plants have specialized tissues for conducting water and nutrients, allowing them to grow taller and thicker. Mosses lack these tissues, limiting their growth potential. Additionally, vascular plants have evolved to invest more resources in structures that support height and thickness, such as lignin-rich cell walls and woody tissues.
Mosses are non-vascular because they have no vascular tissue inside of them. That is why mosses need to live near moist areas so they can absorb the water directly because they don't have long roots to absorb the water.
their vascular tissue is very simple
Ferns are vascular plants. They contain vascular strands that allow water and nutrients to be transferred throughout the the plant. Mosses lack the vascular strands(or tissue) causing the mosses to have a much smaller stature because they are not able to transfer nutrients very well.
The trees are vascular and the mosses are not vascular :):):):)
vascular
They are vascular plants. All angiosperms, or flowering plants are vascular. Only group of plants that are non vascular is mosses.
Unlike true mosses, club mosses have vascular tissue.
Yes, mosses are bryophytes. Bryophytes are a group of non-vascular plants that include mosses, liverworts, and hornworts. Mosses are small, flowerless plants that typically grow in dense green clumps or mats in moist environments.
mosses are non-vascular plants and ferns are vascular seedless plants
mosses are non-vascular plants and ferns are vascular seedless plants
Mosses are non-vascular plants whereas ferns are vascular. In ferns Sporophyte is dominant but in mosses gametophyte is dominant generation. Ferns have definite roots but in mosses leaves and roots are mostly false.