Ferns are plants that have a prothallus with archegonia and antheridia. In ferns, the sporophyte generation is dominant, meaning it is the more visible and long-lived stage of the plant's life cycle compared to the gametophyte stage.
The sporophyte generation is dominant in ferns.
Dominant Allele
During the Paleozoic Era, dominant plant forms included ferns, horsetails, and early seed plants like conifers and cycads. These plants were the main producers in terrestrial ecosystems, contributing to the diversity and abundance of life during this time period.
When two or more forms of a gene for a single trait exist, some forms may be dominant and others recessive. Dominant forms of a gene will be expressed over recessive forms in the phenotype. This is known as codominance or incomplete dominance.
Flowering Plants.
the dominant plants in the Triassic period was seedplants, Glossopteris(southern hemisphere), in the northern hemisphere, conifers Want more info about the triassic period?www.kidcyber.com.au/topics/dino_Triassic.htm
Ferns are plants that have a prothallus with archegonia and antheridia. In ferns, the sporophyte generation is dominant, meaning it is the more visible and long-lived stage of the plant's life cycle compared to the gametophyte stage.
Most deserts have different plants but the most dominant would be the grasses.
definitely the monk Mendel with his plants. He discovered the idea of dominant versus recessive traits.
The sporophyte generation is dominant in ferns.
Dominant Allele
During the Paleozoic Era, dominant plant forms included ferns, horsetails, and early seed plants like conifers and cycads. These plants were the main producers in terrestrial ecosystems, contributing to the diversity and abundance of life during this time period.
Ferns
When two or more forms of a gene for a single trait exist, some forms may be dominant and others recessive. Dominant forms of a gene will be expressed over recessive forms in the phenotype. This is known as codominance or incomplete dominance.
Dominant and recessive
Nonvascular plants are small, simple plants that do not have specialized tissues for transporting water and nutrients. They usually grow close to the ground and rely on diffusion and osmosis to distribute resources through their bodies. Examples include mosses, liverworts, and hornworts.