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monocotyledon
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monocotyledon

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The structure of seeds. The castor is a dicotyledon, a plant in which the developing plant has two leaves, developed from the cotyledon. In maize, a monocotyledon, there is a single leaf developed from the scutellum.

Angiosperm (flowering plant) having an embryo with a single cotyledon, or seed leaf (as opposed to dicotyledons, which have two). Monocotyledons usually have narrow leaves with parallel veins and smooth edges, and hollow or soft stems. Their flower parts are arranged in threes. Most are small plants such as orchids, grasses, and lilies, but some are trees such as palms.



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A phylogenetic analysis of monocotyledons based on the chloroplast gene rps4, using parsimony and a new numerical phenetics method.
Parts two and three deal with orders and families of monocotyledons and dicotyledons, with b&w photographs, diagrams and sections for each.
David Siegel, Granada Hills Botanically, palms and lawn grasses are related, both being monocotyledons, which means they send up a single leaf during germination.
 
 
 
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