Tree ferns are land plants, belonging to the group of vascular plants known as pteridophytes. They typically thrive in moist, shaded environments but do not grow in water. These plants have a distinctive trunk-like stem and are known for their large, feathery fronds. They reproduce via spores rather than seeds, which is characteristic of ferns.
No
A tree fern is a seedless plant. All ferns are seedless plants. They reproduce by spores instead of seeds.
Yes a fern is eukaryotic because it is a part of tghe plant family and plants a eukaryotic.
earth + fern = tree
Moss
Maple tree Rose bush Oak tree Poison ivy plant Fern Mint plant Palm tree Eucalyptus tree Hosta plant Citrus tree
No.It is because it reproduce by spores.
The fern looks like a plant when the pine tree looks like a normal tree? (I don't weather its correct)
yes No, the silver fern can not be a tree fern. Cythea and Alsophila are tree ferns
A vascular plant is a plant with roots and is very different from a nonvascular plant. An example of a vascular plant is a Fern. An example of a nonvascular plant is moss.They are different because a Fern contains vascular tissue that contains cells that store food, water, etc, and a nonvascular plant does not. A vascular plant is also a plant that has a flower at the tip of a stem that is part of the plant.
A staghorn fern is tree dwelling plant, and as such will absorb any form of disolved minerals that may run down the stem (or trunk) of the tree or plant on which it is growing. For example minerals that may be contained in bird and small animal droppings will become dissolved in rain water, as this runs down the stem of the plant the fern will absorb some of this. Dissolved minerals also come from air-borne dust deposits, animal and bird droppings as well as the decomposing bodies of dead tree dwelling animals
The silver tree fern is New Zealand's largest tree fern.