Mossy Tree
Botanically, mosses are bryophytes, or non-vascular plants. They differ
from 'higher' plants by not having internal water-bearing vessels or
veins, and no flowers and therefore no fruits, cones or seeds. They are
small (a few centimeters tall) and herbaceous (nonwoody) and absorb
water and nutrients through their leaves. Mosses have stems which may be
simple or branched and upright or lax, simple leaves that often have
midribs, roots (rhizoids) that anchor them to their substrate, and
spore-bearing capsules on long stems. They harvest sunlight to create
food through photosynthesis. Mosses do not absorb water or nutrients
from their substrate through their roots, so while mosses often grow on
trees, they are never parasitic on the tree.
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