No, dandelions are not non-flowering plants; they are actually flowering plants. Dandelions belong to the Asteraceae family and produce bright yellow flowers that eventually turn into seed heads. These flowers are important for attracting pollinators and reproducing through seed dispersal.
Non-flowering plants include:Conifers and other gymnospermsFernsClubmossesHornwortsLiverwortsMossesGreen algaeFlowering plant groups:Monocotyledonous plantsDicotyledonous plants
Flowering plants require pollinatio non-flowering plants do not.
Neither: They are a genus of flowering plants in the family Asteraceae.
You get both flowering plants and non-flowering plants; non-flowering are things like mosses, ferns and liverworts which produce spore, flowering plants produce seeds
flowering plants and non-flowering plants
Dandelions are day-neutral plants, meaning they do not specifically require certain day lengths to initiate flowering. They can bloom regardless of the length of the day.
Plants are classified as flowering(angiosperms) or non flowering(gymnosperms).
All flowering plants flower to attract pollinators to help to produce either fruit or seeds, so your question is difficult to give an answer to. If you can be a bit more specific I'll try to help.
Conifers are non-flowering plants.
Non-flowering plants are separated from flowering plants at the division level in the taxonomic scheme. Non-flowering plants belong to the divisions like Bryophyta (mosses), Hepatophyta (liverworts), and Pteridophyta (ferns), while flowering plants belong to the division Magnoliophyta (angiosperms).
It is a flowering plant
There's no mystery here. Non-flowering plants don't have flowers.