xylem
An almond is considered a dicot because it belongs to the Rosaceae family, which consists of dicot plants. Dicots are characterized by having two seed leaves (cotyledons) when they germinate, whereas monocots have only one seed leaf.
The terms monocot and dicot (both are abbreviations, standing respectively for monocotyledonous and dicotyledonous) refer to the structure of embryonic plants inside their seeds, specifically, whether they have one leaf or two leaves. That is what it means. It has no relevance to animals. Animals have no leaves and cannot be monocots or dicots.
There are over 175,000 species of dicots, making it one of the largest groups of flowering plants. Dicots are characterized by having two seed leaves.
I am not sure if you are asking about all plants? If you are asking about flowers, then I would say the answer is monocots and dicots. If you are asking about all trees, then the two groups are angiosperms and gymnosperms. The Plant Kingdom itself actually has 10 divisions: 1. Bryophyta 2. Psilophyta 3. Lycophyta 4. Sphenophyta 5. Pterophyta 6. Cycadophyta 7. Ginkgophyta 8. Gnetophyta 9. Coniferophyta 10. Anthophyta The Coniferophyta division is also referred to as gymnosperms, or trees that make cones. And the Anthophyta division (aka Magnoliophyta) are also referred to as angiosperms, trees that make flowers, and all flowers are sub-divided into monocots and dicots.
1. Monocots have one cotyledon in the embryo and dicots have two 2. Vascular bundles in monocots are closed in dicots these are open 3. Leaves have parallel venation in monocots & reticulate in dicots 4. Floral parts are in multiple of three in monocots, and five or their multiple in dicots.
A dicot plant. This arrangement of vascular bundles is a characteristic feature of dicot plants, where the xylem is located towards the center and the phloem towards the outside of the stem, forming a ring. This organization allows for efficient transport of water and nutrients throughout the plant.
Marigolds are dicots. Dicots have reticulate veins in the leaves, flower petals in multiples of four or five, three pollen furrows, and its vascular bundles form rings.
The size of the stele in monocots is typically smaller compared to dicots. Monocots have scattered vascular bundles in their stele, whereas dicots have a more organized arrangement. This difference reflects the distinct vascular organization patterns between the two groups.
They are neither. Monocots and dicots a vascular plants a liverwort is non vascular
They are dicots for sure, no doubt about it. They have vascular bundles that are arranged in a circle within the stem and have leaves with veins that are arranged in a netlike pattern. These are characteristics of dicots and thus Dwarf pea plants fit this classification.
Herbaceous stems lack woody tissue and growth rings unlike woody xylem. Wood is a composite of cellulose fibers which require the the process of phloem in the bark to contain nutrients unlike herbaceous stems that rely on xylem that contains vessel and vascular elements.
A monocot usually has vascular bundles scattered throughout the stem in a complex arrangement, rather than in a circle like in a dicot. This scattered arrangement provides flexibility and support to the stem structure of monocots.
no peanuts are not monocots. since they contain two cotyledons, they are dicots
in a ring shape
In young dicot and monocot stems do not increase in thickness. Xylem and phloem are arranged in vascular bundles in the cortex. In older stems and all woody stems, the vascular tissues form a cylinder between the cortex and the pith. The vascular bundles in a monocot are scattered throughout the stem.
Fireweed is a dicot plant. Dicots typically have flower parts in multiples of four or five, net-like leaf veins, and vascular bundles arranged in a ring, whereas monocots have flower parts in multiples of three, parallel leaf veins, and scattered vascular bundles.