Yes- All Bryophytes produce fruit like structures
Mosses do not bear fruit in the traditional sense like flowering plants. Instead, they reproduce using spores, which are produced in structures called sporangia, typically found on stalks called sporophytes. These sporophytes grow from the moss plant and release spores into the environment to propagate new mosses. So while mosses do not produce fruit, they have their own unique reproductive process.
Mosses do not have flowers; instead they bear capsules to produce spores.
Horsetails produce seeds while mosses, ferns, and conifers produce spores.
Two plants that do not make seeds are ferns and mosses. Ferns reproduce through spores, which are not enclosed in a fruit or seed, while mosses reproduce via spores and do not produce true seeds.
Yes. Autotrophs produce their own food, usually by photosynthesis. Mosses are green plants that can produce their own food from sunlight by photosynthesis.
Liverworts, mosses, and ferns do not produce flowers or seeds. They reproduce using spores instead.
Second generation produced in mosses is sporophyte on the gametophytic plant body.
Mosses and ferns.
Ferns and mosses do not produce seeds.
non flowering
Lichens produce oxalic acid while mosses do not produce acid.
No, hibiscus plants reproduce using seeds, not spores. Spores are typically found in ferns, mosses, and other non-flowering plants. Hibiscus flowers produce seeds within a seedpod or fruit structure.