Since all known land plants have a vascular system, it is likely that the first land plant also had a vascular system. Researchers believe that there were two types of plants that may have been the first land plants. These are called rhynia and zosterophyllum.
The first land-inhabiting plants were likely mosses and liverworts. These early plants played a key role in the colonization of land by providing a foundation for other plant species to follow. Over time, more complex plants, such as ferns and gymnosperms, evolved.
Adaptive radiation spread them into many land niches
Yes it is a land plant of tropical climate.
It depends. If the pollen that the plat came from is part of the other plant's family, then it is crossbred. However, if not, the pollen will not travel down through the other plant's stigma. Such as a white and red rose will make either a pink or a red rose.
A rose is a land plant;because it is on land.
Bamboo is a C3-plant.
Asia
It was a land plant.
green algae
The first plant on Earth was an aquatic plant. This was because plants had not yet developed the thick and sturdy wall that holds them upright on land.
I think a forget-me-not
Nonvascular plants
A rose is a land plant;because it is on land.
Of course it is a land plant
The first land-inhabiting plants were likely mosses and liverworts. These early plants played a key role in the colonization of land by providing a foundation for other plant species to follow. Over time, more complex plants, such as ferns and gymnosperms, evolved.
Cooksonia was the most successful land conqueror and was the first of an entirely new kind of plants that was no longer an alga or bryophyte.
Moss is a land, nonvascular, and seedless plant.