Chemistry, asked by ushabandari3, 4 hours ago

what are monocotyledonous seeds​

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Answered by mrgoodb62
2

Answer:

A monocotyledonous seed has embryos that possess only one large cotyledon called scutellum. Generally, the scutellum is shaped like a shield. It is located laterally towards the side of the embryo axis. Like dicotyledons, the embryo axis of monocotyledons possesses a shoot tip called the plumule.

Answered by Ambitiousatul009
0

Monocotyledons, also referred to as monocots, are flowering plants bearing seeds with a single cotyledon or embryonic leaf.

Monocotyledon, byname monocot, one of the two great groups of flowering plants, or angiosperms, the other being the eudicotyledons (eudicots). There are approximately 60,000 species of monocots, including the most economically important of all plant families, Poaceae (true grasses), and the largest of all plant families, Orchidaceae (orchids). Other prominent monocot families include Liliaceae (lilies), Arecaceae (palms), and Iridaceae (irises). Most of them are distinguished by the presence of only one seed leaf, or cotyledon, in the embryo contained in the seed. Eudicotyledons, in contrast, ordinarily have two cotyledons.

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