yes
Fruits are typically classified by the flowering plant they come from. Monocots have fruits with parallel venation, while dicots have fruits with branched venation. Additionally, monocots usually have multiples of three floral parts (petals, sepals, stamens), while dicots have multiples of four or five.
No, dicots do not have coleoptiles. Coleoptiles are specialized protective sheaths found in the seedlings of monocot plants to help them emerge from the soil. Dicots do not possess coleoptiles as they have different structures that aid in seedling emergence.
Monocots are found in the Plant Kingdom, specifically in the division Magnoliophyta (angiosperms). Dicots are also found in the Plant Kingdom in the same division Magnoliophyta.
Japaleno are monocot / DICOTS
they are part of the Citrus family and are dicots
No they do not, they are only found on Angiosperm Plants along with fruits.
Fibrous roots are usually found in monocot plants, not dicots. Dicots typically have a taproot system, which consists of a main root with smaller lateral roots branching off of it.
A taproot system is typically found in dicotyledonous plants. Monocots usually have fibrous root systems.
Monocots: Tulips True Lilies Grass Orchids Onions Dicots: Broadleaf trees Shrubs Most fruits & vegetables
Poppies are dicots
Yes, cacti are dicots. Dicots are a type of flowering plant that have two seed leaves, whereas monocots have one seed leaf. Cacti belong to the class Magnoliopsida, which includes dicots.
It and all of the other members of the olive family are dicots.