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  2. Moss - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moss

    Chloroplasts (green discs) and accumulated starch granules in cells of Bryum capillare. Botanically, mosses are non-vascular plants in the land plant division Bryophyta. They are usually small (a few centimeters tall) herbaceous (non-woody) plants that absorb water and nutrients mainly through their leaves and harvest carbon dioxide and sunlight to create food by photosynthesis.

  3. Spore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spore

    Vascular plants are either homosporous (or isosporous) or heterosporous. Plants that are homosporous produce spores of the same size and type. Heterosporous plants, such as seed plants, spikemosses, quillworts, and ferns of the order Salviniales produce spores of

  4. Heterospory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heterospory

    Heterospory evolved due to natural selection that favoured an increase in propagule size compared with the smaller spores of homosporous plants. [ 2 ] Heterosporous plants, similar to anisosporic plants [ clarification needed ] , produce two different sized spores in separate sporangia that develop into separate male and female gametophytes.

  5. Lycopodiopsida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lycopodiopsida

    Many club-moss gametophytes are mycoheterotrophic and long-lived, residing underground for several years before emerging from the ground and progressing to the sporophyte stage. [ 4 ] Lycopodiaceae and spikemosses ( Selaginella ) are the only vascular plants with biflagellate sperm, an ancestral trait in land plants otherwise only seen in ...

  6. Lycophyte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lycophyte

    Some lycophytes are homosporous while others are heterosporous. [5] When broadly circumscribed , the lycophytes represent a line of evolution distinct from that leading to all other vascular plants , the euphyllophytes , such as ferns , gymnosperms and flowering plants .

  7. Fontinalis antipyretica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fontinalis_antipyretica

    Fontinalis antipyretica, [2] greater water-moss, [3] or common water moss, is a species of submerged aquatic moss belonging to the subclass Bryidae. It is found in both still and flowing freshwater in Europe, Asia, Greenland and Africa. In North America it is found in most Canadian provinces with a seaboard and most US states except the most ...

  8. Sporangium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sporangium

    Most heterosporous plants there are two kinds of sporangia, termed microsporangia and megasporangia. Sporangia (clustered in sori) on a fern leaf Equisetum arvense strobilus cut open to reveal sporangia. Sporangia can be terminal (on the tips) or lateral (placed along the side) of stems or associated with leaves.

  9. Funaria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Funaria

    Funaria hygrometrica is called “cord moss” because of the twisted seta which is very hygroscopic and untwists when moist. The name is derived from the Latin word “funis”, meaning "a rope". In funaria root like structures called rhizoids are present. [2] Capsules are abundant with the moss surviving as spore when conditions are not suitable.