Mosses are small, non-vascular plants that belong to the division Bryophyta. They are found in moist and shaded areas, and often grow in clusters or mats. Mosses play a crucial role in the ecosystem by helping to retain moisture, prevent soilerosion, and provide habitats for small organisms.
Life Cycle of Mosses
Mosses have a unique life cycle that involves alternation of generations. The dominant stage in the moss life cycle is the gametophyte, which produces both male and female gametes. When the male gametes fertilize the female gametes, a sporophyte is formed, which eventually releases spores to start the cycle anew.
Key Characteristics of Mosses
Non-vascular: Mosses lack vascular tissues, such as xylem and phloem, which are found in higher plants.
Small size: Mosses are typically small, ranging from a few millimeters to a few centimeters in height.
Moisture-dependent: They require water for reproduction, and their thin, delicate structures are prone to desiccation.
Earth/Space Science: Students will use scientific skills and processes to explain the chemical and physical interactions (i.e., natural forces and cycles, transfer of energy) of the environment, Earth, and the universe that occur over time.
Earth History: Explain how sedimentary rock is formed periodically, embedding plant and animal remains and leaving a record of the sequence in which the plants and animals appeared and disappeared.
Explain how sedimentary rock buried deep enough may be reformed by pressure and heat and these reformed rock layers may be forced up again to become land surface and even mountains.