Plantae
they belong to the plantae kingdom
which kingdom do each of ferns
An example of a kingdom within the domain of Eukarya is Plantae. This kingdom consists of multicellular, photosynthetic organisms that have cell walls made of cellulose. Examples of organisms within the kingdom Plantae include flowering plants, trees, mosses, and ferns.
Algae, mosses, and ferns are examples of the Kingdom Plantae. This kingdom includes a diverse range of organisms that are primarily photosynthetic and have cell walls made of cellulose. Algae are often considered simple plants, while mosses represent non-vascular plants, and ferns are vascular plants that reproduce via spores. Together, they illustrate the evolutionary diversity within the plant kingdom.
no rice are not produced by ferns(nephrolepis) as they come under the plant kingdom pteridophytes rice grains are produced by paddy plant which comes under the group of plant kingdom called angiosperms
Algae, ferns, mosses, fungi, flowering plants
Ferns are eukaryotic organisms. They belong to the kingdom Plantae and have complex cells with defined nuclei and membrane-bound organelles. Unlike prokaryotes, which are single-celled organisms without a nucleus, ferns exhibit multicellularity and specialized structures.
Division Anthocerotophyta: Hornworts Division Bryophyta: Mosses Division Lycophyta: Club Mosses; Scale Trees Division Hepaticophyta: Liverworts Division Pteridopsida: Ferns Division Tracheophyta: Vascular Plants (Largest Division) Division Sphenopsida: Horsetails
Ferns are classified as plants, and all plants belong to the taxonomic domain of Eukarya.Eukarya covers all organisms in the Kingdom Plantae, as well as the Kingdoms Animalia, Fungi and Protista.
Yes, ferns are of the kingdom Plantae, which all are Eukaryotes. Meaning multicellular and containing organelles and nucleus
Organisms in the plant kingdom include grasses, trees, ferns, mosses, and flowering plants. These organisms are characterized by their ability to photosynthesize and produce their own food.
Seed Ferns are an extinct group of plants that had fern-like foliage. However, they are not true ferns because unlike true ferns they did not spread spores as a means of reproduction, but seeds. Their numbers were severly reduced in the Permian period, and they were finally wiped out as a group by the end of the Cretaceous.