No. Flowering plants emerged around 140 million years ago.
There are 11 main phyla of non-flowering plants, including mosses and club mosses. Though some plants are called mosses (e.g. scotch moss), these flowering plants aren't true mosses.
yes because the want to know wich plant lives longer
True plants are multicellular organisms belonging to the kingdom Plantae. They are characterized by possessing chlorophyll and being able to photosynthesize, using sunlight to produce energy. True plants include a wide variety of species, ranging from mosses and ferns to flowering plants.
No, they do not. They reproduce by budding. Pollen is produced by flowering plants.
A daisy is in the class Magnoliopsida, which includes all flowering plants with true flowers and seeds enclosed in ovaries.
Flowers are vascular. they have true roots.
There are 11 main phyla of non-flowering plants, including mosses and club mosses. Though some plants are called mosses (e.g. scotch moss), these flowering plants aren't true mosses.
There was a decline in many species of plants and animals and new forms evolved, ushering in the Cretaceous Period with flowering plants and hardwood trees, along with the first true birds.
true ( a+ )
No, white moss is not a flowering plant. Mosses belong to a group of small, non-flowering plants that reproduce through spores instead of seeds. They are simple plants that lack true roots, stems, and leaves.
yes because the want to know wich plant lives longer
Gymnosperms - 'naked seed'. But that does not include mosses, which are plants, but do not have true seeds. Ferns are vascular plants, but don't have seeds either.
True plants are multicellular organisms belonging to the kingdom Plantae. They are characterized by possessing chlorophyll and being able to photosynthesize, using sunlight to produce energy. True plants include a wide variety of species, ranging from mosses and ferns to flowering plants.
They have true roots, stems and leave and reproduce (sexually) by producing haploid gametes.
No, they do not. They reproduce by budding. Pollen is produced by flowering plants.
A daisy is in the class Magnoliopsida, which includes all flowering plants with true flowers and seeds enclosed in ovaries.
This is true. The first plants that were domesticated were a variety of wild rye, which is a type of grass.