Ferns mosses and fungi.
Plants that reproduce with cones include conifers like pine, spruce, and fir trees. Plants that reproduce with spores include ferns, mosses, and some types of algae. These plants produce spores instead of seeds to enable reproduction.
spores
There new plants are called gametophtes
Moss does not produce seeds like flowering plants; instead, it reproduces through spores. Spores are dispersed by the wind or water and can germinate to produce new moss plants.
No, not all plants have flowers. Some plants reproduce through spores or other methods, while others produce flowers of different types.
Heterosporous plants are those that produce two types of spores that differ in size and sex. In particular, they produce two morphologically distinct types of sporangia (megasporangia and microsporangia) that create two distinct types of spores (megaspores and microspores). The spores then develop into separate male and female gametophytes. They are different from homosporous plants in which the sporophyte produce a single type of sporangium and then a single type of mother spore cell.
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.
Ferns produce spores as their means of procreation as other plants produce seeds.
Plants that reproduce with cones include conifers like pine, spruce, and fir trees. Plants that reproduce with spores include ferns, mosses, and some types of algae. These plants produce spores instead of seeds to enable reproduction.
gametophytes
spores
spores
There new plants are called gametophtes
The plant produces spores during the reproductive stage, known as the sporophyte stage in the plant life cycle. Spores are typically produced in structures like sporangia or sori and are responsible for reproduction in plants such as ferns and mosses.
gametophyte stage
Through the process of meiosis.
The gametophyte stage