true they can
Nonvascular plants dont have xylem and phloem, whereas seed plants have vascular bundles
There are more vascular plants than nonvascular plants in the world. Vascular plants have specialized tissues that efficiently transport water and nutrients throughout the plant, enabling them to grow larger and in a wider range of habitats compared to nonvascular plants. Vascular plants include ferns, flowering plants, and conifers, while nonvascular plants include mosses and liverworts.
Vascular plants have specialized tissues for conducting water and nutrients throughout the plant, allowing for greater size and complexity compared to nonvascular plants, which lack these tissues. Vascular plants also have true roots, stems, and leaves, while nonvascular plants usually have simpler structures like rhizoids for anchorage. Vascular plants reproduce through seeds or spores, while nonvascular plants rely on spores for reproduction.
Nonvascular plants lack the specialized tissues that allow vascular plants to transport water and nutrients efficiently throughout their structures. This limits their ability to grow taller than vascular plants and to thrive in a wider range of environments. Additionally, nonvascular plants rely heavily on moisture for reproduction, which constrains their habitat options compared to vascular plants.
Yes the cell walls of nonvascular plants do support their bodies
Because they are nonvascular plants and they don't grow because they are dead
Because nonvascular plants do not have true leaves
Yes they do because because nonvascular are thin
Nonvascular plants have stems
Because of photosytheis, it can because they have tubes.
no
It's B e2020 people.
Because they have no roots or stems they are non vascular plants
Nonvascular plants dont have xylem and phloem, whereas seed plants have vascular bundles
There are more vascular plants than nonvascular plants in the world. Vascular plants have specialized tissues that efficiently transport water and nutrients throughout the plant, enabling them to grow larger and in a wider range of habitats compared to nonvascular plants. Vascular plants include ferns, flowering plants, and conifers, while nonvascular plants include mosses and liverworts.
Vascular plants have specialized tissues for conducting water and nutrients throughout the plant, allowing for greater size and complexity compared to nonvascular plants, which lack these tissues. Vascular plants also have true roots, stems, and leaves, while nonvascular plants usually have simpler structures like rhizoids for anchorage. Vascular plants reproduce through seeds or spores, while nonvascular plants rely on spores for reproduction.
Nonvascular plants lack the specialized tissues that allow vascular plants to transport water and nutrients efficiently throughout their structures. This limits their ability to grow taller than vascular plants and to thrive in a wider range of environments. Additionally, nonvascular plants rely heavily on moisture for reproduction, which constrains their habitat options compared to vascular plants.