Yes, Spanish moss is a vascular plant. It belongs to the bromeliad family and has specialized tissues for the transport of water, nutrients, and sugars throughout the plant.
Moss is a nonvascular plant, meaning it lacks specialized tissues for the transport of water and nutrients. It relies on diffusion and osmosis to absorb what it needs.
Moss is a non-vascular plant, meaning it lacks specialized tissues for transporting water and nutrients. Instead, moss absorbs water and nutrients directly through its cells.
Non vascular is term used for plants and not for fungi, any how fungi lack vascular tissue .
they have a single vein of vascular tisse in the leaf
no it is nonvascular
Yes, Spanish moss is a vascular plant. It belongs to the bromeliad family and has specialized tissues for the transport of water, nutrients, and sugars throughout the plant.
Moss is a nonvascular plant, meaning it lacks specialized tissues for the transport of water and nutrients. It relies on diffusion and osmosis to absorb what it needs.
Moss is a non-vascular plant, meaning it lacks specialized tissues for transporting water and nutrients. Instead, moss absorbs water and nutrients directly through its cells.
Non vascular is term used for plants and not for fungi, any how fungi lack vascular tissue .
Hornworts are non-vascular seedless plants they also lack vascular tissue such as moss, and liverworts
they have a single vein of vascular tisse in the leaf
Depends if you are talking about a non-vascular plant like moss.
no it is not, it is a vascular plant
Sphagnum is not a conifer sphagnum is a type of moss.
No. Sphagnum is a kind of moss, commonly called peat moss.
No. Sphagnum is a kind of moss, commonly called peat moss.