Ferns.
Flowering plants produce pollen grains, which are equivalent to spores in non-flowering plants. These pollen grains are responsible for plant reproduction through the process of pollination, where they are transferred to the female reproductive organs of the flower for fertilization.
Plants that reproduce with spores instead of seeds primarily include ferns, mosses, and liverworts. These non-flowering plants belong to a group known as non-vascular plants, which rely on spores for reproduction and dispersal. Spores are typically produced in sporangia and can develop into new individuals in suitable conditions, bypassing the seed stage found in seed plants. This method of reproduction allows them to thrive in various environments, often where seeds may not be as effective.
Nonvascular plants reproduce through spores. They typically need a damp or moist environment to release their spores and for the spores to germinate and grow into new plants. This environment provides the necessary conditions for spore dispersal and establishment of the new plant generation.
There new plants are called gametophtes
A person that grows plants is called a farmer.
Ferns and fungi are two plants that produce spores.
Ferns are an example of plants that grow from spores instead of seeds. Spores are tiny reproductive structures that develop on the underside of fern fronds and can germinate into new fern plants under suitable conditions.
Plants belonging to bryophytes and Pteridophytes etc. reproduce with spores and thoseof gymnosperms and angiosperms reproduce with seeds.
The onion itself is a bulb, or root that grows underground. The onion is a type of vegetation (plant) that spreads with seeds. Plants do not have spores. Spores are the version of seeds used by fungi (like mushrooms) to spread and grow.
Plants like moss and ferns reproduce by spores. Some plants reproduce by sending out runners which will grow into new plants. Other plants will have parts such as leaves or stems which fall off the mother plant and grow into a new plant.
Yes. The moss and ferns have two different forms, one of which reproduces by shooting spores into the air, which then form into small plants that release sperm and eggs. These combine into an embryo that grows into a plant which releases spores, repeating the cycle.
No, a bryophyllum plant does not grow from spores. Bryophyllum plants reproduce asexually through the production of plantlets along the margins of their leaves, which can then grow into new plants when they fall to the ground.
Flowering plants produce pollen grains, which are equivalent to spores in non-flowering plants. These pollen grains are responsible for plant reproduction through the process of pollination, where they are transferred to the female reproductive organs of the flower for fertilization.
Moss typically grows from spores that are carried by the wind or water. These spores land on a suitable surface, such as soil, rocks, or trees, where they germinate and begin to grow into moss plants.
Plants produce spores during the gametophyte, or haploid, stages. Spores are the sex cells for the plant. The spores will then germinate and produce new plants.
Plants that reproduce with spores instead of seeds primarily include ferns, mosses, and liverworts. These non-flowering plants belong to a group known as non-vascular plants, which rely on spores for reproduction and dispersal. Spores are typically produced in sporangia and can develop into new individuals in suitable conditions, bypassing the seed stage found in seed plants. This method of reproduction allows them to thrive in various environments, often where seeds may not be as effective.
spores are the offspring of some plants.