The lemon bush is a dicot, belonging to the class Magnoliopsida. This plant has two seed leaves, net-like leaf veins, and flower parts in multiples of four or five, characteristic of dicots.
No, a bush bean seed is not a monocot; it is a dicot. Bush beans belong to the Fabaceae family, and their seeds typically have two cotyledons, which is a characteristic of dicots. Monocots, in contrast, have only one cotyledon. This distinction is important in plant classification and development.
MONOCOT
Betel leaf - MONOCOT
dicot seeds
monocot
dicot
dicot
dicot
No, a bush bean seed is not a monocot; it is a dicot. Bush beans belong to the Fabaceae family, and their seeds typically have two cotyledons, which is a characteristic of dicots. Monocots, in contrast, have only one cotyledon. This distinction is important in plant classification and development.
A lemon seed is a dicot. Dicots have seeds with two cotyledons, which store nutrients for the developing seedling. Lemon seeds also show other typical dicot characteristics such as branching veins in their leaves.
dicot
Grass is a monocot plant.
monocot
MONOCOT
Monocot
Betel leaf - MONOCOT
monocot