Nonvascular plants
Fossils of the earliest land plants come from the Ordovician period (roughly 450 million years ago).
I think its because there's more risks on land so the stakes are higher to evolve faster So some land organisms have babies faster meaning more genetic mutation therefore faster evolution, or extiction
So that way the animals would have plenty of food to eat
It was a land plant.
There are many different ways that a land form evolve. These land forms can evolve by erosion or deposition for example.
The first plant on Earth was an aquatic plant. This was because plants had not yet developed the thick and sturdy wall that holds them upright on land.
One of the first land plants to evolve was likely green algae, which transitioned from aquatic environments to terrestrial habitats around 450 million years ago. These plants laid the foundation for the development of more complex land plants such as mosses and ferns.
I think a forget-me-not
Since we don't actually know which organism appeared first, there's no way of knowing what came second.
Plants were because all they needed was water and sunlight. Which they had...
Algae and other primitive plant-like organisms were the first plants to move toward the shoreline during the Ordovician period. These early plants played a crucial role in colonizing the land and paving the way for more complex plant species to evolve later on.
Most evolutionary biologists theorize that the first living organisms were single-celled prokariotes similar to currently existing bacteria. The distinction between proto-biotic and true life is a difficult one, so while there were self-replicating amino acid chains, the first life would have been a distinct cell that divided in an aqueous (watery) environment. (see related link on abiogenesis)