The vascular plant characterized by jointed, needle-like branches is the horsetail, belonging to the genus Equisetum. Horsetails are ancient plants and are known for their distinctive segmented stems and whorls of needle-like leaves. They thrive in moist environments and can often be found in wetlands or along riverbanks. Their unique structure and reproductive methods set them apart from most other vascular plants.
no it is not, it is a vascular plant
Papaya is a tropical fruit which grows on a vascular plant (tree).
Corn is a vascular plant. Everything is vascular, except liverworts and mosses.
vascular
A vascular system helps plants grow tall by transporting water and nutrients from the soil to the high branches and leaves. Moss does not need a vascular system because it is a short plant that stays in close contact to it's nutrients/soil
the tree would be a pine tree because pine trees have needlelike leaves
Is a dandelion a vascular or nonvascular plant
a vascular plant is a plant with veins. A non vascular plant does not have veins
There are several characteristics that can help to identify a plant as a horsetail. Horsetails are vascular plants with hollow, jointed stems. They are seedless and have scale-like leaves arranged in a whorl pattern.
it is a vascular plant
no it is not, it is a vascular plant
Papaya is a tropical fruit which grows on a vascular plant (tree).
No It is a vascular plant
It is a vascular plant. If it has roots, stems, leaves and flowers, it is a vascular plant. Mosses, algae and fungi are considered to be non-vascular.
A tall desert plant would be a vascular plant.
Apple is a vascular plant
Corn is a vascular plant. Everything is vascular, except liverworts and mosses.