Biology, asked by Anonymous, 8 months ago

What are the major groups of plants



reproduction in plants and animals?



plant reproduction diagram?





don't copy from the Google i request you all.....___/\__





plant reproductive system?


plant reproduction cycle?


reproduction in animals?

vegetative reproduction?

what is asexual reproduction in plants?

reproduction in plants..?

Answers

Answered by vikhyat04
1

Answer:

Explanation:

The major plant groups include bryophytes (mosses), pteridophytes (ferns), gymnosperms (conifers), and angiosperms (flowering, seed-bearing plants).

Answered by Anonymous
0

The major plant groups include bryophytes (mosses), pteridophytes (ferns), gymnosperms (conifers), and angiosperms (flowering, seed-bearing plants).Within the plant kingdom, plants are divided into two main groups. The largest group contains the plants that produce seeds. These are flowering plants (angiosperms) and conifers, Ginkgos, and cycads (gymnosperms). The other group contains the seedless plants that reproduce by spores.These are the mosses (non-vascular plants), the ferns (seedless, vascular plants), gymnosperms and angiosperms. The latter two groups are both vascular plants that produce seeds. Gymnosperms dominated the forests of this planet until out-competed by the angiosperms which now are the dominant form of plant life.In order to continue the study and organization of plants, botanists (scientists who study plants) must find a way to categorize the many different species. ... These differences in characteristics are used to group plants into species, which provides a way of classifying and therefore organizing plants.The four major groups of plants are ferns, mosses, conifers, and flowering plants.The major plant groups include bryophytes (mosses), pteridophytes (ferns), gymnosperms (conifers), and angiosperms (flowering, seed-bearing plants).Green Plant Evolution and Invasion of Land

The evidence suggests that land plants evolved from a line of filamentous green algae that invaded land about 410 million years ago during the Silurian period of the Paleozoic era.Basis of Classification. Species is the basic unit of classification. Organisms that share many features in common and can breed with each other and produce fertile offspring are members of the same species. Related species are grouped into a genus (plural- genera).

Green Plant Evolution and Invasion of Land

Green Plant Evolution and Invasion of LandThe evidence suggests that land plants evolved from a line of filamentous green algae that invaded land about 410 million years ago during the Silurian period of the Paleozoic era.Basis of Classification. Species is the basic unit of classification. Organisms that share many features in common and can breed with each other and produce fertile offspring are members of the same species. Related species are grouped into a genus (plural- genera).Reproduction is the process by which plants and animals produce offspring. Reproduction may be asexual or sexual. Asexual reproduction occurs when a single cell divides to form two daughter cells that are genetically identical to the parent cell.Reproduction of plants takes place asexually like by budding, vegetative methods, spores, wind, or through insects, whereas some lower animals like algae reproduce asexually while higher animals reproduce sexually and give birth to the young ones.

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