Tracheophytes |
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Tracheophytes are plants with roots, stems, and leaves. Some tracheophytes reproduce with seeds and some reproduce with spores.
Vascular TransportUnlike bryophytes, tracheophytes have tissues called xylem that transport water and food to tissues called phloem. Together the xylem and the phloem are called vascular tissue. Vascular plants have roots, stems, and leaves. Adapted for Growth Vascular plants have some adaptations that help them survive. They are covered with a waxy layer, or cuticle, that holds in water. They also have stomata, or pores, that help them take in and let out gasses like carbon dioxide and oxygen. |
To Seed or Not to Seed There are two types of vascular plants: cryptogams or nonseed plants and phanerogams or plants with seeds. Doing More With Spores Vascular plants like ferns and horsetails don't have seeds, they reproduce with spores! These plants have two stages - the gametophyte stage and the sporophyte stage. Planting a SeedOne of the major differences between nonseed plants (cryptogams) and seed plants (phanerogams) are the seeds! Each seed has food-storage tissue or sporophyte and a hard protective shell or seed coat. Seeds protect new growth better than spores. They also can be spread over a greater distance than spores when animals like birds and squirrels carry them from place to place. Images
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