Corn, like other members of the grass family, is a monocot, which means it has one seed leaf, or cotyledon. This single cotyledon emerges shortly after germination and serves as the plant's first leaf. As the corn plant grows, it develops additional leaves, but it only has one seed leaf from the start.
It's seed does not have two cotyledons. The leaves have veins that go upward, not branching out from a thick, center midrib(the center vein in most leaves) ~Those are the main reasons of why a corn is a monocot.
from corn
it has one cotyledon
peace out
It has two.
Depends. - Do you know what kind of plant the seed is from? Look it up. - Can you wait until the seed germinates? Count the initial number of leaves it has as soon as it germinates and before it begins to grow new leaves. - Can you simply dissect the seed? Count how many leaves are on the embryonic plant inside. - Is this a plant that has already germinated and you want to identify (and count) which of its leaves are seed leaves? That's more difficult. Some plants discard their seed leaves within weeks after germination. Some keep them below the soil and only raise their true leaves above the soil. In some plants, the seed leaves are of a markedly different form that the true leaves, but in some (especially pine and related softwood trees) the seed leaves look almost identical to the true leaves.
50 to 100
A seed corn is the least common type of corn. Occurring only on the heel or ball of the foot, a seed corn consists of a circle of stiff skin surrounding a plug of cholesterol.
A columbine has two cotyledons, which are the seed leaves that emerge from a germinating seed before the true leaves develop.
The difference is that the bean seed germinates by dicots and the corn seed germinates by monocots.
The correct phrase is "shuck the corn" rather than "chuck the corn". To "chuck" means to throw. "Shuck" means to peel something off of, such as a corn husk. To use "shuck" as a noun means a material consisting of seed coverings and small pieces of stem or leaves that have been separated from the seeds (corn). Which is why we say "shuck the corn".
no but the seed of the corn is eaten.