Science, asked by kkthakur83056, 3 months ago

A spore producing plant is​

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Answered by ashumane
1

Answer:

Spores are most conspicuous in the non-seed-bearing plants, including liverworts, hornworts, mosses, and ferns. In these lower plants, as in fungi, the spores function much like seeds. In general, the parent plant sheds the spores locally; the spore-generating organs are frequently located on the undersides of leaves.

Bread mould or Rhizopus is the common type of fungus. During asexual reproduction, inside the sporangium the mould makes spores, and the spores multiply inside it. When the sporangium breaks, open and all spores inside will float out. The spores land on a place where they can turn into a new mould, and begin to grow.

Answered by abcd4494
2

Answer:

Bread mould

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