name name any two plants that produce together
Answers
Explanation:
Easily the best known group of plants, the great majority of plants that you can name or eat or use in any way are flowering plants. They are defined by having flowers, seeds that have a food source called the endosperm and are surrounded by a fruit. The fruit may be fleshy and juicy as the word "fruit" implies or be a pod as in beans and peas or dry and hard like an acorn or peanut (groundnut) shell. The flowering plants are the most recently evolved major group of plants.
Flowering plants can be subdivided into two groups, the monocotyledons and dicotyledons. The name refers to the cotyledons or "seed leaves" these are the first leaves that emerge from the germinating seed, monocotyledons (monocots) produce one seed leaf and dicotyledons (dicots) produce two (you saw that coming didn't you?). This sounds like a small difference but has more significant consequences when the plants grow. Dicots are sometimes called "broad leaved" plants for reasons that are obvious if you look at a leaf from such a plant. The veins of dicots diverge from a large central vein, monocots by comparison have veins that are parallel, the leaves of these are often long and thin.
Angiosperm examples:
Monocotyledons: All kinds of grasses including crops such as wheat, rice, maize, oats, barley and other cereals. Also, bamboos, sugar cane, all kinds of palms, onions and the onion family such as leeks and garlic, lilies, daffodils, tulip, hyacinths and irises.
Dicotyledons: Roses, oaks, beeches, mahogany, ebony, teak, lemons and other citrus, eucalyptus, cacti, acacias, grapes, peas and beans, apples, plums, mangoes, peaches, durian, potatoes, carrots and parsnips to name a few