Yes the spores are like seeds. They drop off of a fern and onto the ground and sooner or later they sprout and makes a new fern.
Spores are not like seeds. They lack a seed coat, endosperm and preformed embryonic parts. In addition spores give rise to the gametophyte generation and seeds give rise to the sporophyte generation.
Ferns and mosses do both reproduce by using spores BUT mosses have a reduced almost parasitic sporophyte generation which produces the spores. These spores will produces the gametophyte generation (the green leafy thing we see). The gametophyte produces the sex cells that fuse to make a zygote. This zygote then forms a new sporophyte.
With ferns the sporophyte generation is more dominant than the gametophyte. The leafy structure we see is the sporophyte.
Plants such as ferns, mosses, and liverworts reproduce with spores. Gymnosperms and angiosperms, including most flowering plants, reproduce with seeds.
on the under side of the leaves, there are brown circles, those are the pollen/seeds.
No, white moss is not a flowering plant. Mosses belong to a group of small, non-flowering plants that reproduce through spores instead of seeds. They are simple plants that lack true roots, stems, and leaves.
Monocots do not produce spores. They are flowering plants that reproduce through seeds contained within fruits. Spores are typically produced by non-flowering plants, such as ferns and mosses.
An example of a non-flowering plant is a fern. Ferns reproduce through spores rather than flowers and seeds. They are known for their distinctive, feathery fronds and are commonly found in moist, shady environments.
Flowering plants reproduce by seeds
Many non-flowering plants (such as ferns) reproduce by means of spores; the other major non-flowering plant group are gymnosperms, which produce seed, but in cones not flowers
They are in spores bags and they help to reproduce for the non-flowering plants
reproduce from spores .simpler than flowering plants.
Non-flowering plants, such as ferns and mosses, reproduce through spores rather than seeds. They do not produce flowers, fruits, or seeds, and instead rely on other methods such as spores, cones, or vegetative propagation for reproduction. These plants typically have simpler reproductive structures compared to flowering plants.
Plants such as ferns, mosses, and liverworts reproduce with spores. Gymnosperms and angiosperms, including most flowering plants, reproduce with seeds.
Nonflowering plants make spores or reproduce by budding.
Non-flowering plants that do not reproduce by spores include ferns and gymnosperms like conifers. These plants reproduce through seeds rather than spores, with ferns producing seeds in structures called sori and gymnosperms producing seeds in cones.
Moss plants are a very old species. Flowering plants developed after moss was created. Moss reproduce by spores.
A flower is the organ of reproduction of the higher plants or Spermaphytes. Non flowering plants such as ferns and mosses reproduce by spores therefore do not require flowers.
No, they are not. Mosses are non-flowering plants that reproduce by spores.
No, fungi are not flowering plants. They belong to their own kingdom, Fungi, separate from the Plant Kingdom. Fungi reproduce through spores, while flowering plants reproduce through seeds within flowers.