No, club mosses, horsetails, ferns and spike mosses are vascular plants that are seedless. They grow from spores, cells that can develop into new organisms. I was wondering if all nonvascular plants are seedless (opposite question)
Source: 5th grade McGraw Hill Science text book
answ2. In New Zealand we have Tree Ferns up to 10m high. Assuredly seedless, but vascular.
It may be that the terms 'vascular' and 'non-vascular' are now considered redundant.
No.
No, Ferns are Vascular Plants.
Seedless nonvascular and seedless vascular plants, such as mosses and ferns, can be used as biomass to generate electricity through processes like combustion or gasification. These plants can be grown quickly, making them a potential renewable energy source. However, the efficiency of electricity production from these plants may vary depending on factors such as moisture content and combustion technology.
In nonvascular seedless plants, such as mosses and liverworts, the mobile reproductive parts are typically sperm cells. These sperm cells are released from specialized structures called antheridia and require water for mobility to reach the egg cells for fertilization.
The three phyla that are seedless and nonvascular are Bryophyta (mosses), Hepatophyta (liverworts), and Anthocerophyta (hornworts). These groups of plants rely on water for reproduction and lack specialized tissues for transporting water and nutrients.
mosses... nova.
No.
vascular plants have roots and can be seedless or it may have seeds. a nonvascular plant are always seedless and have rhizoids instead of roots. :)
seedless plants are a plant that contains no seeds their for it is nonvascular!
they live in damp places
No, Ferns are Vascular Plants.
Both have swimming sperm.
Seedless nonvascular and seedless vascular plants, such as mosses and ferns, can be used as biomass to generate electricity through processes like combustion or gasification. These plants can be grown quickly, making them a potential renewable energy source. However, the efficiency of electricity production from these plants may vary depending on factors such as moisture content and combustion technology.
In nonvascular seedless plants, such as mosses and liverworts, the mobile reproductive parts are typically sperm cells. These sperm cells are released from specialized structures called antheridia and require water for mobility to reach the egg cells for fertilization.
Bryophytes are the most simple land plants. They are nonvascular, seedless, and they reproduce through spores. These plants include mosses, liverworts, and hornworts.
Both nonvascular plants and seedless vascular plants reproduce using spores, lack seeds and flowers, and rely on water for fertilization to occur. Additionally, they do not have a well-developed system for water and nutrient transport like vascular plants do.
Nonvascular plants and seedless vascular plants are both land plants that evolved from green algae. Both types also rely on water to be able to reproduce.