The all have the ability to live on land.
mushroom, moss, fern, algae...
Fine
algae, moss, liverwort, hornwort
No, the hibiscus plant and the bird's nest fern cannot be classified together, as they belong to different plant families and categories. Hibiscus is a flowering plant in the Malvaceae family, while the bird's nest fern (Asplenium nidus) is a non-flowering, epiphytic fern in the Aspleniaceae family. Their distinct reproductive structures and growth forms further differentiate them within the plant kingdom.
fern,mildew,and algae
fern,mildew,and algae
fern,mildew,and algae
Gymnosperms, such as pine trees, and angiosperms, such as hibiscus, both sport an important evolutionary feature that ferns do not. Gymnosperms and angiosperms both make seeds through sexual reproduction, while ferns produce spores through a type of asexual reproduction. (the latin word sperma means seed.)
Both pine trees and hibiscus plants have seeds. Ferns do not. That's actually a pretty important distinction from an evolutionary standpoint.
An aetheogam is a class of plant with neither stamens or pistils, such as algae, fern, fungus, lichen, and moss.
Bracken.
Three plants that reproduce by spores are: 1.Mosses 2.Fern 3.Algae