Ferns are vascular - instead of xylem and phloem they have tracheids which acts in a similar way. - Brett Smith (MSc Marine Ecology)
algae, moss, liverwort, hornwort
Nonvascular
Moss is a nonvascular plant, meaning it lacks specialized tissues that transport water and nutrients throughout the plant. Instead, moss absorbs water and nutrients directly through its cells. This limits their size and ability to grow tall.
A fern grows from a fern spore.
Yes the cell walls of nonvascular plants do support their bodies
mosses are nonvascular but fern are vascular
algae, moss, liverwort, hornwort
These are both nonvascular plants and are quite capable of preforming photosynthesis, thus they can easily make their own food as can all plants.
yeah cause they are greenAnswerYes they are, but not because they are green. thats right they are vascular because they have an xylem
daisyis Nonvascular.
Nonvascular plants have stems
nonvascular
Nonvascular
No, a liverwort is nonvascular :)
A vascular plant is a plant with roots and is very different from a nonvascular plant. An example of a vascular plant is a Fern. An example of a nonvascular plant is moss.They are different because a Fern contains vascular tissue that contains cells that store food, water, etc, and a nonvascular plant does not. A vascular plant is also a plant that has a flower at the tip of a stem that is part of the plant.
A buckeye is vascular, meaning it has specialized tissues for transporting water and nutrients throughout the plant. This vascular system consists of xylem for water transport and phloem for nutrient transport.
Nonvascular means without fluid. It is often used in understanding blood flow. The cornea of the eye is nonvascular as it has no blood flow directly to it.