Biology, asked by saaroopya, 7 months ago

can any one explain about mosses in broyophyes​

Answers

Answered by meghana1308
2

hlo mate here is ur ans....

A moss is a flowerless, spore-producing plant - with the spores produced in small capsules. ... page noted that bryophytes have a gametophyte stage and a sporophyte stage. The spore capsule, often with a supporting stalk (called a seta), is the sporophyte and this grows from the gametophyte stage....

hope this helps uh dear

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Answered by pranshuagarwal48
0

Answer:

Mosses were formerly grouped with the hornworts and liverworts as "non-vascular" plants in the division "bryophytes", all of them having the haploid gametophyte generation as the dominant phase of the life cycle. ... Mosses are now classified on their own as the division Bryophyta. There are approximately 12,000 species.

Explanation:

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