Plants are highly diverse and their are several types of plants. Two major types of plants are Green Algae ( Charophyceans) and Land Plants.From their plants evolve into:Bryophytes: non-vascular plants: [Ex: liverworts, hornworts, mosses]Next diversifying into 2 types of Vascular Plants (Seedless & Seed)Lycophytes, Pterophytes : Seedless Vascular PlantsGymnosperm, Angiosperms: Seed Vascular Plants
Nonvascular plants and seedless vascular plants are both land plants that evolved from green algae. Both types also rely on water to be able to reproduce.
The plants that fall in the category of the seedless vascular plants include lycophyta, sphenophyta, pterophyta, and ilotophyta. Examples include horsetails, whisk ferns, and ferns.
No, seed plants out number seedless by a lot.
the spores all seedless plants have it.
They are hybrid plants. Specifically grown to be seedless. I guess you could call them "engineered plants."
Good questions to ask about Seedless Plants could include: - what are the differences between seedless and seeded plants? - Do seedless plants have better nutritional value than seeded plants? - Why do certain plants contain seeds?
Nonvascular plants and seedless vascular plants are both land plants that evolved from green algae. Both types also rely on water to be able to reproduce.
The two kinds of seedless vascular plant that human can eat are fiddlehead and young horsetail
A horsetail is in no specific plant kingdom. It is however grouped along with several other types of plants that have xylem and phloem to transport nutrients and water around the plants but do not have seeds, called vascular seedless plants.
within the seedless plants category
not