A lima plant, specifically the lima bean (Phaseolus lunatus), is not a cotyledon itself but rather a type of plant that has cotyledons. Cotyledons are the first leaves that appear from a seed during germination, and they serve as a food source for the young plant. Lima beans typically have two cotyledons, classifying them as dicots.
No.
The lima bean comes from pods that hang downwards on the plant, each containing 4-7 beans.
yes
no
the lima beans
No, there is not any information that suggests salt kills Lima beans. However, too such salt on a Lima beam plant may damage it.
Phaseolus lunatus is the lima bean. Its well know as a "butter bean" as well and other names in other counties. The Lima Bean is known in so many different cultures and called so many different names.
The two halves of a lima bean are called cotyledons. These are the seed leaves that store nutrients for the developing plant. When the lima bean germinates, the cotyledons provide the necessary energy for growth until the plant can photosynthesize.
yes NO its not it's and angiopserm
The plant is the embryo. When the seed begins to germinate and become a plant that is when it is an embryo.
pinto bean grows way faster
no it actually hurts the plant and it will slow it down from growing.