I really do not know, so stop buggin me!!!!
No, maidenhair fern is not nonvascular; it is a vascular plant. Maidenhair ferns belong to the family Pteridaceae and are classified as ferns, which are part of the vascular plant group known as tracheophytes. They have specialized tissues for transporting water and nutrients, distinguishing them from nonvascular plants like mosses.
Actaea pachypoda, commonly known as baneberry, is a vascular plant. Vascular plants have specialized tissues (xylem and phloem) that transport water, nutrients, and food throughout the plant. This classification includes a wide range of plants, including flowering plants, ferns, and trees, of which Actaea pachypoda is a part.
Ferns are the most commonly known seedless vascular plant, while there are also horsetails and club mosses. Liverworts are not seedless vascular plants -- they are actually nonvascular.
No, ferns are vascular plants, meaning they have specialized tissues for conducting water and nutrients throughout their structure. They are part of a group of plants known as Pteridophytes, which have vascular tissue for transport.
Nonvascular plants are low-growing, have cell walls, and do not have roots for absorbing water from the ground.Plants that don't have specialized systems on the order of xylem and phloem for moving water through internal tissues are nonvascular plants. For example, a tree's xylem is a channel for moving water and nutrients upwards through a tree. A tree's phloem is a channel for flowing the end products downwards from the photosynthetic interaction with sunlight.So nonvascular plants have no leaves, roots or stems. Their two main examples are the green algae and the bryophytes. The bryophytes include the mosses [Bryophyta], the liverworts [Marchantiophyta], and the hornworts [Anthocerotophyta]. Liverworts may appear to have leaves. But they aren't true leaves, because of the lack of vascular tissue. Instead what they have are rounded parts called lobes.
ricca and marchantia are two plants without tubes they are also non-vascular
Mold is not a plant; it is a type of fungus. Fungi, including mold, are not classified as vascular or nonvascular plants because they belong to a separate kingdom in the classification of living organisms known as Fungi.
vascular, nonvascular and adaptation
Ferns are the most commonly known seedless vascular plant, while there are also horsetails and club mosses. Liverworts are not seedless vascular plants -- they are actually nonvascular.
No, ferns are vascular plants, meaning they have specialized tissues for conducting water and nutrients throughout their structure. They are part of a group of plants known as Pteridophytes, which have vascular tissue for transport.
Nonvascular plants are low-growing, have cell walls, and do not have roots for absorbing water from the ground.Plants that don't have specialized systems on the order of xylem and phloem for moving water through internal tissues are nonvascular plants. For example, a tree's xylem is a channel for moving water and nutrients upwards through a tree. A tree's phloem is a channel for flowing the end products downwards from the photosynthetic interaction with sunlight.So nonvascular plants have no leaves, roots or stems. Their two main examples are the green algae and the bryophytes. The bryophytes include the mosses [Bryophyta], the liverworts [Marchantiophyta], and the hornworts [Anthocerotophyta]. Liverworts may appear to have leaves. But they aren't true leaves, because of the lack of vascular tissue. Instead what they have are rounded parts called lobes.
Since all known land plants have a vascular system, it is likely that the first land plant also had a vascular system. Researchers believe that there were two types of plants that may have been the first land plants. These are called rhynia and zosterophyllum.
There is no plant phylum. The order of taxonomy is Domain, Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family, Genus and species. Plants are all in the kingdom Plantae, and there are many phyla under the Plantae.
Plants with tubes for carrying food and water are known as vascular plants. These include ferns, gymnosperms (such as conifers), and angiosperms (flowering plants). The tubes responsible for transporting water are called xylem, while the tubes for transporting food are called phloem.
Peas, lentils, and peanuts are vascular plants, as they possess specialized tissues for transporting water and nutrients. Lilies are also vascular plants, belonging to the group of flowering plants known as angiosperms. In contrast, non-vascular plants, such as mosses, lack these specialized transport systems. Therefore, all the plants mentioned—peas, lentils, peanuts, and lilies—are vascular plants.
There are about 12,000 different species of moss in the World. All species of moss are in the kingdom of Plantae.
Vascular plants. These plants have specialized tissues for transporting water, nutrients, and other substances throughout their bodies, allowing them to grow larger and more complex compared to non-vascular plants.