Many flowering plants use their seeds to spread but some also use their bulbs, roots or stems. Daffodil and tulip bulbs make lots of tiny baby bulbs. Each bulb produces a new flower. Tubers and rhizomes are underground roots or stems swollen with food. We eat some tubers, such as potato and carrot tubers.
Not all plants do actually. Most Vascular Plants ( plants with tubes ) have seeds. Some plants have spores instead of seeds.
Not all vascular plants have seeds. Some plants (like club mosses) are vascular and produce spores. For example the phylum Lycophyta are club mosses and quill-worts. these plants produce spores but still have vascular roots, stems, and one vascular vein in each leaf.
Chloroplasts are not plants, but rather organelles found in plant cells that are responsible for photosynthesis. Seedless plants, like ferns and mosses, reproduce via spores, while seed plants reproduce via seeds. Chloroplasts are found in both seedless and seed plants, as they are essential for the process of photosynthesis.
Plants which do not have seeds have been engineered to lose the seeds because they are preferred by consumers. Plants without seeds could be due to the fact that the flowers have not been developed. As the fruit matures, seeds will develop. When you plant a potato because there are sprouts coming out of the eyes or nodes, you are able to plant them because the potato is a underground stem. Plants without seeds reproduce asexually using spores, like mosses and ferns; plants with seeds use sexual reproduction with pollination.
They have vascular tissue and use seeds to reproduce. In addition, they all have body plans that include leaves, stems, and roots. Most seed plants live on land. Seed plants face many challenges, including standing upright and supplying all their cells with water and food. They meet these two challenges with vascular tissue. The thick walls of the cells in the vascular tissue help support the plants. In addition, water, food, and nutrients are transported throughout the plants in vascular tissue.
Only seeds have seed coats not plants. Not all seeds have seed coats.
Conifers
The sporophyte is dominant.
Non-seed plants evolved from seed plants.
False. Two large groups of plants could be seed plants and seedless plants, or vascular and nonvascular plants. All plants have leaves of some kind or another.
Yes, tomatoes can grow true to seed, meaning that the seeds from a specific tomato variety will produce plants with similar characteristics to the parent plant.
Flowers and reproduce by seed
No, not all seed plants have sperm carried by wind-borne pollen. Some seed plants rely on other means of pollination, such as animals like insects or birds, to transport pollen.
Some common plants that do not grow from seeds include most varieties of bananas, garlic, and potatoes. These plants are typically propagated through vegetative methods such as bulbs, rhizomes, tubers, or cuttings, rather than from seeds.
Not all plants do actually. Most Vascular Plants ( plants with tubes ) have seeds. Some plants have spores instead of seeds.
Seed Ferns are an extinct group of plants that had fern-like foliage. However, they are not true ferns because unlike true ferns they did not spread spores as a means of reproduction, but seeds. Their numbers were severly reduced in the Permian period, and they were finally wiped out as a group by the end of the Cretaceous.
No, not all plants have vascular tissue. Vascular plants have xylem and phloem to transport water and nutrients. Additionally, not all plants produce seeds. Seed-producing plants are divided into gymnosperms (like conifers) and angiosperms (flowering plants).