Plants are first classified as to whether or not they have vascular tissue, like xylem and ploem, which act as transportation mechanisms. Non-vascular plants, bryophytes, include moss and liverwort. Vascular plants, tracheophytes, are then further classified as to whether or not they produce seeds. Seedless plants produce by spores, like ferns. These are primitive plants. Seed plants are then further classified into angiosperms or gymnosperms. Angiosperms are flowering plants, and include lemons and apples. Gymnosperms reproduce using cones, and do not produce flowers. These include pine and juniper. Angiosperms (the flowering plants) are further classified into monocotyledons and dicotyledons, which differ in the location of the vascular bundles in their xylem and phloem as well as other factors.
Some are:
1. Conifers
2. Ferns
3. Flowering Plants
4. Mosses
Theophrastos, often referred to as the "Father of Botany," contributed to taxonomy by categorizing and describing over 500 plants species. He classified plants based on their physical characteristics and grouped them into larger categories. His work laid the foundation for the development of modern botanical classification systems.
Plants are classified into divisions, classes, orders, families, genera, and species. Animals are classified into phyla, classes, orders, families, genera, and species. The main difference is the higher taxonomic level at which the classifications begin for plants (division for plants and phyla for animals).
Plants are classified based on their ability to produce their own food through photosynthesis, while animals are classified based on their ability to consume other organisms for energy. This difference leads to plants being categorized as autotrophs and animals as heterotrophs.
Because they are single celled organisms. There are single celled plants like clamydomonas and chlorella. Amoeba and paramecium are not classified as plants because their mode of getting food is not like plants. Rather it resembles more with animals.
pyrrophyta ------------- Pyrrohphyta are a type of dinoflagellate which are a type of flagellated protists and sub-classification of protists. Animal-like protists would be known as eukaryotic organisms. Examples of some of the animal-like protists would be paramecium, amoeba, euglena, vorticella and most of what are historically known as protozoans.
What are some ways the stars in the photo could be grouped or classified
they are grouped by there collums
Originally, fungi were grouped with plants.
Flowering plants are grouped based on several characteristics, including their reproductive structures (e.g., number of floral organs), seed structures (e.g., number of cotyledons), and growth habits (e.g., woody or herbaceous). They are classified into two main groups: monocots and dicots, which are further divided into various taxonomic ranks based on these characteristics.
Plants are classified according to the family, genus and species. We can also include the variety, subspecies or cultivar to help identify a plant. The more you go down the group, the lesser are the differences.
Minarols
flowering plants is one
Plants are classified in the scientific world based on their characteristics such as structure, reproductive features, and genetic makeup. This classification system is known as taxonomy and plants are grouped into categories such as kingdom, division, class, order, family, genus, and species. The most widely used system for classifying plants is the one developed by Carl Linnaeus, which organizes plants based on their shared characteristics.
It was inadequate because he only classified things according to whether they lived on land, in the water, or in air. He also grouped plants based on the differences in their stems.
plants are classified by people putting plants in three different groups
Stars are classified using the Hertzberg-Russell Diagram
Plants are classified in the domain Eukarya.