Examples of monocot in the following topics:
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- Monocots include grasses and lilies while eudicots or dicots form a polyphyletic group.
- Members in these groups all share traits from both monocot and dicot groups.
- True woody tissue is rarely found in monocots.
- This feature is still seen in the modern monocots.
- Vascular tissue forms a ring in the stem whereas in monocots, vascular tissue is scattered in the stem.
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- Monocot and dicot seeds develop in differing ways, but both contain seeds with a seed coat, cotyledons, endosperm, and a single embryo.
- The storage of food reserves in angiosperm seeds differs between monocots and dicots .
- In monocot seeds, the testa and tegmen of the seed coat are fused.
- This produces the fibrous root system of the monocot.
- The structures of dicot and monocot seeds are shown.
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- Monocots and dicots differ in their patterns of venation .
- Monocots have parallel venation in which the veins run in straight lines across the length of the leaf without converging.
- (a) Tulip (Tulipa), a monocot, has leaves with parallel venation.
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- Dicots (flowering plants with two embryonic seed leaves) have a tap root system while monocots (flowering plants with one embryonic seed leaf) have a fibrous root system.
- In dicot roots, the xylem and phloem of the stele are arranged alternately in an X shape, whereas in monocot roots, the vascular tissue is arranged in a ring around the pith.
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- Most modern angiosperms are classified as either monocots or eudicots based on the structure of their leaves and embryos.
- Basal angiosperms, such as water lilies, are considered more primitive because they share morphological traits with both monocots and eudicots.
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- The zygote develops into an embryo with a radicle, or small root, and one (monocot) or two (dicot) leaf-like organs called cotyledons.
- This difference in the number of embryonic leaves is the basis for the two major groups of angiosperms: the monocots and the eudicots.
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- Intercalary meristems occur only in monocots at the bases of leaf blades and at nodes (the areas where leaves attach to a stem).
- This tissue enables the monocot leaf blade to increase in length from the leaf base; for example, it allows lawn grass leaves to elongate even after repeated mowing.
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- Dicots have a tap root system, while monocots have a fibrous root system, which is also known as an adventitious root system.
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- In monocot stems, the vascular bundles are randomly scattered throughout the ground tissue .
- In (b) monocot stems, vascular bundles composed of xylem and phloem tissues are scattered throughout the ground tissue.
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- Sugar, to sweeten dishes, is produced from the monocot sugarcane and the eudicot sugar beet.