Well, honey, a fern and a sunflower are both plants, so there's your similarity right there. But if you want specifics, ferns reproduce through spores and don't produce flowers or seeds like sunflowers do. So, while they both soak up that sweet sunshine, they do it in their own unique ways.
A fern is a plant, so yes it is a living thing.
The cells of a fern plant that you see are diploid. Ferns have a lifecycle which alternates between a diploid sporophyte generation and a haploid gametophyte generation. The visible fern plant is the diploid sporophyte generation.
A plant like a fern that does not produce seeds is known as a fern. Ferns reproduce through spores instead of seeds. Spores are released from the underside of the fronds and develop into new fern plants.
yes
Fern
the both are green
The reason why a fern is different from a sunflower plant is: The leaves of the fern don't need chlorophyll like the sunflower plant does. ~* Hope it helps ya! - iLuv_Ninjas400.. <- A random name i thought ov! Tee hee
seeds
They are both plants
what is inflorescense of sunflower
A fern is a seedless vascular plant. OR NAH
A fern is a plant with feathery fronds.
Fern is seedless plant. It bears the spores. It is less evolved plant.
Yes a fern is eukaryotic because it is a part of tghe plant family and plants a eukaryotic.
There is no need to do this with domesticated sunflower seed.
Yes, it is.
Yes.