Along with mosses, liverworts are categorized with a group of seedless plants called bryophytes. Among other features that liverworts share with mosses, they are small plants in which the haploid gametophytic stage is dominant. Liverworts reproduce sexually by sperm and egg, and new plants disperse and arise by spores. Many liverworts can also reproduce asexually in the wild by asexual propagules called gemmae or by growth from fragments of leaves or even single cells. There are two broad categories of liverworts, thalloid liverworts in which the plants have a broad flat tissue mass, and leafy liverworts that usually have leafy appendages and that look superficially a lot like mosses. To learn more about bryophytes visit the following site: