Biology, asked by Mastersolver1, 8 months ago

Why do some seeds don't have any cotyledons​

Answers

Answered by hacker1234582
1

Answer:

These are formed within the seed with the endosperm. These are classified plants based on the number of cotyledons present. Cotyledons can function to provide the initial growth for the plant. ... It is however true that the seedlings of some flowering plants do not have any cotyledons at all

Answered by thankyebo12
0

Answer:

These are formed within the seed with the endosperm. These are classified plants based on the number of cotyledons present. Cotyledons can function to provide the initial growth for the plant. ... It is however true that the seedlings of some flowering plants do not have any cotyledons at all.

Often when the seed germinates, or begins to grow, the cotyledon may become the first leaves of the seedling. Botanists use the number of cotyledons present in the seed of a plant as a means of classification. Monocots are seeds that have only one cotyledon, while dicots are plants with two cotyledons.

Therefore, a monocot seed has one cotyledon and a dicot seed has two cotyledons. Tell students that corn is a monocot and beans are dicots.

Explanation:

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