heat resistant, and will germinate when conditions are favorable
Spores are produced during sporogenesis, which is found specifically in plants, algae and fungi. No animals currently produce spores as a method of reproduction.
Because the Amanita muscaria reproduces with spores, it reproduces sexually. The spores are called basidiospores. The spores are spread by wind, and also by animals ingesting the mushrooms and spreading the spores in their waste.
Ferns reproduce through spores, which are tiny structures produced on the underside of fern fronds. Mosses reproduce through spores as well, which are typically produced in capsules at the tip of the moss plant.
Meiosis in bryophytes, such as mosses and liverworts, occurs within the sporangium or capsule located on the sporophyte generation. The sporangium produces spores through meiosis, and these spores ultimately develop into the gametophyte generation.
The definition of sporolysis is the destruction or dissolution of spores. Spores being the beginnings of fungal species, mushrooms, molds, etc...
The potato itself has no spores. However, potatoes can be very susceptible to fungus infections, particularly in storage. The fungus which attacks the potato, of course, will have spores.
true
True.
true
No, this is false.
None that I know of. Plants reproduce, sometimes, by making spores. The Fern plant and the true mosses do, for example.
Yes, it is true that ferns propagate through spores for gametophytic generation but the sexual reproduction is achieved by anthridia and archegonia produced on these gametophytes.
Mosses reproduce by spores.
Not necessarily. They can be dormant, as is the case with bacteria that form spores.
spores are not seeds and seeds are not spores
spores are not seeds and seeds are not spores
spores are not seeds and seeds are not spores