Pine trees have quite a few things that fern and mosses do not. Pine trees have pine cones and a wooden trunk.
The seedless vascular plant commonly known as princess pine or ground pine is known scientifically as Lycopodium obscurum. It resembles a small fern and is often used in floral arrangements.
Turpentine is typically derived from the resin of pine trees through a process of distillation. The resin is collected from the pine trees and then heated to extract the essential oils that make up turpentine.
Yes, pine nuts are real nuts. They are the edible seeds of pine trees and are often used in cooking and baking for their rich, buttery flavor.
Pine trees Spruce trees Hemlock trees Fir trees Cedar trees
The Coulter pine (Pinus coulteri), found in California and Mexico, produces the largest pine cones in the world. These pine cones can reach up to 15-20 inches (38-51 cm) long and weigh up to 10 pounds (4.5 kg).
fern
fern and pine and maple
mosses and frens are example of what plants
There different because it's a piece of moss
The seedless vascular plant commonly known as princess pine or ground pine is known scientifically as Lycopodium obscurum. It resembles a small fern and is often used in floral arrangements.
Ferns are long Mosses are small and wet
In the water like mosses
mosses are nonvascular but fern are vascular
bird nest fern, horsetail fern, mosses and lots of other more
No, Pine Trees have pine needles, not leaves
Both pine trees and hibiscus plants have seeds. Ferns do not. That's actually a pretty important distinction from an evolutionary standpoint.
The fern looks like a plant when the pine tree looks like a normal tree? (I don't weather its correct)