Angiosperm
The name is "angiosperm." This is the term for any plant or tree that produes seeds in a thick ovarian wall. Fruit comes from a fertilized flowers. The seeds produces in the ovary and the ovary wall hardens, produces a fruit. Unlike gymnosperms, that produce seeds on the plant or in a flower (like marigolds or pine trees) angiosperms are edible. Angiosperms examples include Eggplants, Peach Trees, Ginkgo Trees, Bannana Trees, Bayberries, Blue Berries. You get the idea.
Flowers are simply called flowers when referred to generally. Different parts have more complicated names, such as the petals, which are called the corolla. Flowers that grow in groups are called inflorescences.
Actually Pteridophytes are ferns and the like. They have spores. I think Gymnosperms is the term you're thinking of. It comes from the Greek for naked seed.
Cryptogamae is an obsolete term used to describe a group of non-flowering plants that reproduce by spores, such as mosses, liverworts, and ferns. These plants do not produce flowers or seeds like angiosperms and gymnosperms.
Angiosperm refers to seed producing plants. This includes plants with flowers, and fruits with seeds inside. This is the meaning of angiosperm in botany.
Angiosperm
Angiosperm
The term "arnica" stands for a type of daisy-like flowers that bloom in the spring. It is in the daisy family and is yellow. Arnica seeds can be found where plant seeds are sold.
The term for a plant that produces a seed with a protective cover is an "angiosperm." Angiosperms are flowering plants that produce seeds enclosed within an ovary, which develops into a fruit that provides protection for the seed.
Ovulary
The name is "angiosperm." This is the term for any plant or tree that produes seeds in a thick ovarian wall. Fruit comes from a fertilized flowers. The seeds produces in the ovary and the ovary wall hardens, produces a fruit. Unlike gymnosperms, that produce seeds on the plant or in a flower (like marigolds or pine trees) angiosperms are edible. Angiosperms examples include Eggplants, Peach Trees, Ginkgo Trees, Bannana Trees, Bayberries, Blue Berries. You get the idea.
Actually Pteridophytes are ferns and the like. They have spores. I think Gymnosperms is the term you're thinking of. It comes from the Greek for naked seed.
No..? Hince the term, SPRING Seeds(:
Angiosperm
Angiosperm
Angiosperm
A gymnosperm is a non-flowering seed plant.Specifically, the term comes from the ancient Greek γυμνόσπερμος(gymnospermos) for "naked seeds". It designates plants which lack flowers and seed coverings. It includes woody-stalked perennials, of which three-fourths are conifers whose cones are female or male seeds.