Pine trees, which are gymnosperms, have seeds that typically contain a single cotyledon. However, the number of cotyledons can vary among different species of pine, with most having two to five cotyledons per seed. These cotyledons serve as the first leaves of the seedling, providing nutrients during initial growth.
It has 2 Cotyledons. Therfore, making it a dicot ;)
A lemon seed typically has two cotyledons.
Beans have two cotyledons, which classify them as dicots (dicotyledons). These cotyledons serve as the initial leaves of the plant and provide nutrients to the developing seedling until it can produce true leaves.
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An iris has only one cotyledon.
A groundnut (peanut) has two cotyledons.
normal placenta may have 15 - 28 cotyledons
a kidney bean seed has 2 cotyledons
It has 2 Cotyledons. Therfore, making it a dicot ;)
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).
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A lemon seed typically has two cotyledons.
A dicot seed typically has two cotyledons. These cotyledons store nutrients for the seedling until it can photosynthesize and produce its own food.
An avocado seed typically has one cotyledon. This cotyledon is the part of the seed that will sprout and serve as the initial source of nutrients for the seedling.
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