it's dicotyledon.
--> No! Pine is a gymnosperm ("naked seed"; no ovary), and thus the terms dicotyledon (dicot or eudicot) and monocotyledon (monocot) do not apply to conifers like Pine. The terms "monocotyledon" and "dicotyledon" (or more accurately "eudicot") only apply to the angiosperms (flowering plants containing ovaries/"vessels"). Pine is NOT an angiosperm, thus this these terms DO NOT apply to Pine (or any other conifers).
An orange tree is a dicot, as it belongs to the category of flowering plants that have two seed leaves when germinating.
it depends if it has lets say, one cotyledon, parallel veins, and petals in multiples of three then then its a monocot, if it has two cotyledons, petals in multiples of 4 or 5, and its leaves have network veins then it's a dicot, so id guess a poinciana tree is a dicot
dicot
A birch tree is a dicot because it belongs to the class Magnoliopsida, which includes dicotyledonous flowering plants. Dicots have two seed leaves, net-like veins in the leaves, and flower parts in multiples of four or five.
Cassava is a dicot plant, belonging to the family Euphorbiaceae. It is a flowering plant that produces seeds with two seed leaves, characteristic of dicot plants.
MONOCOT
Dicot
Dicot ;)
No. They are gymnosperms. Angiosperms are flower producing plants, and have 2 categories: monocotyledon and dicotyledon.
Dicot
Dicot
An orange tree is a dicot, as it belongs to the category of flowering plants that have two seed leaves when germinating.
dicot
dicot
it depends if it has lets say, one cotyledon, parallel veins, and petals in multiples of three then then its a monocot, if it has two cotyledons, petals in multiples of 4 or 5, and its leaves have network veins then it's a dicot, so id guess a poinciana tree is a dicot
dicot angiosperm
It is dicot...