Yes, all true trees (not bamboo or palm, these are monocots, or tree ferns, these are non-vascular) are dicots.
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.
Yes, a Japanese maple is a vascular plant. Vascular plants have specialized tissues that transport water and nutrients throughout the plant. Japanese maples have xylem and phloem tissues that allow for this transport.
It is a DICOT because it has two cotyledons.
dicot
Clove is a member of the Myrtle family, and is therefore a dicot.
Dicot
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.
yes sugar maple is dicot because it's seeds have two cotyledon.
dicot angiosperm
If it has Japanese maple leaves, then it's obviously a Japanese Maple!
A maple tree is a dicot angiosperm. Dicots have two seed leaves, whereas monocots have one seed leaf and gymnosperms do not produce flowers or fruit. Maple trees belong to the angiosperm (flowering plant) group, producing seeds enclosed within an ovary.
No, Japanese maple trees do not produce syrup. Syrup is typically made from the sap of sugar maple trees, not Japanese maple trees.
koyo = maple koyonoki maple tree
No, Japanese maple trees are not typically tapped for sap like sugar maple trees.
The word 'maple' when translated from English to Japanese is カエデ.
No the species used is the Canadian Maple.
No.