no actualy do not know
The sugar maple tree (Acer saccharum) belongs to the order Sapindales. This order includes various families of flowering plants, with the sugar maple specifically classified in the family Sapindaceae. The sugar maple is well-known for its vibrant fall foliage and is also a key species for maple syrup production.
Yes, it is a flowering monocotyledonous plant.
You can buy a sugar maple tree at local nurseries, garden centers, or online plant retailers.
John R. Donnelly has written: 'Carbohydrate levels in current-year shoots of sugar maple' -- subject(s): Carbohydrates, Sugar maple 'Morphological and physiological factors affecting formation of adventitious roots on sugar maple stem cuttings' -- subject(s): Plant cuttings, Plant propagation, Sugar maple
Yes. There are several commercial sources sugar cane, sugar beets, maple sap, plant nectar (honey), corn
sugar isn't a plant. Sugar is extracted from plants. Sugar comes from sugar cane or sugar beet. Or from fruit. Sugar cane is a type of grass and it has flowers. Sugar beet is a hardy biennial plant. If the plant is not harvested then during its second growing season, it will produce flowers and seeds
Flowering grasses are angiosperms. An angiosperm is any flowering plant, including trees like oak and maple trees, flowers, and grasses.
Yes, it is a monocotyledonous flowering plant
flowering plant
corn is a flowering monocotyledonous plant
A sugar maple leaf is from a dicot plant. Dicots are characterized by having leaves with branched veins, whereas monocots have leaves with parallel veins.
The scientific or taxonomic name would be Abutilon X hybridum.