In spore Cases, they carry them till they break and the spores fly, or swim away to reproduce.
A sporophyte is a plant element that carries the spores. The spores are the male reproduction seeds, that grow out to a whole new plant when fertilised.
Spores.
Yes, green moss does produce spores as part of its reproductive cycle. These spores are released from the sporophyte structure of the moss and can germinate to grow into new moss plants.
Yes, hair-cap moss does reproduce via spores. The spores are produced in the sporophyte stage of the moss life cycle, released into the environment, and grow into new moss plants under suitable conditions.
spores
A sporophyte is a plant element that carries the spores. The spores are the male reproduction seeds, that grow out to a whole new plant when fertilised.
Spores.
Yes, green moss does produce spores as part of its reproductive cycle. These spores are released from the sporophyte structure of the moss and can germinate to grow into new moss plants.
Yes, hair-cap moss does reproduce via spores. The spores are produced in the sporophyte stage of the moss life cycle, released into the environment, and grow into new moss plants under suitable conditions.
The maple trees that you see are in the sporophyte stage of the plant life cycle. A sporophyte will produce spores which then develop into gametophytes. So, yes, maple trees have spores (if you are talking about the sporophyte stage). The sporophyte stage is part of the life cycle of all land plants.
spores
spores
the answer is N. Spores grow gametophytes that produce a haploid gamete through mitosis once fertilization occurs the product is a zygote that is 2n which will grow into a sporophyte that produces spores through meiosis.
the sporophyte stage
Spores belong to the sporophyte generation in the plant life cycle. They are reproductive structures that develop from sporangia on the sporophyte and give rise to the gametophyte generation through germination.
The maple trees that you see are in the sporophyte stage of the plant life cycle. A sporophyte will produce spores which then develop into gametophytes. So, yes, maple trees have spores (if you are talking about the sporophyte stage). The sporophyte stage is part of the life cycle of all land plants.
The process that accomplishes the change from sporophyte to gametophyte is called meiosis. During meiosis, a diploid sporophyte cell undergoes two rounds of division, resulting in four haploid spores. These spores then develop into gametophytes through mitotic divisions.