Tracheophytes |
Tracheophytes are plants with roots, stems and leaves. Some tracheophytes reproduce with seeds and some reproduce with spores. |
Vascular Transport Unlike
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![]() Their roots take up water and nutrients from the soil and anchor them to the soil. Stems move water and nutrients to the plant's leaves and the leaves capture the sunlight the plant needs for photosynthesis.
|
To Seed or Not to SeedThere are two types of vascular plants: cryptogams or nonseed plants and phanerogams or plants with seeds.Doing More With Spores![]() The sporophyte stage is what you are probably most familiar with. This is when the fern has fronds with spores on the underside. The spores are released and fall to the ground where they grow into something called a prothallus. This is the gametophyte stage. The prothallus produces a sperm and an egg cell. The sperm fertilizes the egg, and the fertilized egg grows into a new fern which will produce spores and start the process all over again! Planting a Seed![]()
|