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  1. What are vascular plants and how do they differ from non-vascular plants? This webpage introduces the basic features, diversity, and evolution of vascular plants, with examples and illustrations. You will learn about the structure, function, and reproduction of vascular plants, and their role in the biosphere.

  2. Aug 14, 2018 · Non vascular plants do not contain the water- and nutrient-conducting structures that vascular plants possess. Non vascular plants absorb water and nutrients through their leaves. They exist chiefly in gametophyte form. Examples of non vascular plants include mosses, liverworts and hornworts.

  3. Club moss (Lycopodium annotinum). lower vascular plant, any of the spore-bearing vascular plants, including the ferns, club mosses, spike mosses, quillworts, horsetails, and whisk ferns. Once considered of the same evolutionary line, these plants were formerly placed in the single group Pteridophyta and were known as the ferns and fern allies.

  4. a seedless vascular plant characterized by a jointed stem. liverwort. the most primitive group of non-vascular plants. moss. a group of plants in which a primitive conductive system appears. phloem. the vascular tissue responsible for transport of sugars, proteins, and other solutes. sporophyll.

  5. Vascular plants are those plants, which have specialised vascular tissues for the transport of water, minerals and food. They contain xylem for water and mineral transport from roots to different parts of the plant and phloem for the transport of food from leaves to other parts of the plant. Vascular plants have diploid sporophyte stage as the ...

  6. Seedless vascular plants are characterized by the presence of true roots, stems, and leaves, though sometimes these parts cannot be clearly distinguished from each other. In a few cases, the leaves and roots arise from underground stems, called rhizomes, which also store food. The plants show prominent stomata which can’t close, and a ...

  7. Dec 2, 2021 · Club mosses are an example of seedless vascular plants that have survived thousands of years. During the Carboniferous period, large species of club moss trees grew in giant swamps and forests. Having adapted to evolving conditions on the planet, club mosses are now much smaller organisms, most measuring only inches in height.

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