Bryophytes are non-vascular plants that include mosses, liverworts, and hornworts. A type of plant that is not a bryophyte would be a flowering plant, such as a rose or a sunflower, which belong to the group known as angiosperms. Other examples include ferns, which are vascular plants but not bryophytes, and gymnosperms like pine trees, which also do not fall under the bryophyte category.
Ferns (A+)
The common name for a bryophyte is moss.
No, it is a gymnosperm
Correct, a fern is not a type of bryophyte. Ferns belong to a different plant group called Pteridophytes, while bryophytes include mosses, liverworts, and hornworts. Ferns have vascular tissues for conducting water and nutrients, while bryophytes lack true vascular tissues.
mosses
Ferns (A+)
The common name for a bryophyte is moss.
No, it is a gymnosperm
What is moss
Cooksonia was the most successful land conqueror and was the first of an entirely new kind of plants that was no longer an alga or bryophyte.
Correct, a fern is not a type of bryophyte. Ferns belong to a different plant group called Pteridophytes, while bryophytes include mosses, liverworts, and hornworts. Ferns have vascular tissues for conducting water and nutrients, while bryophytes lack true vascular tissues.
tracheophyte
Moss plant is a bryophyte
mosses
Archegonia
What is moss
hyphae