Two somewhat different types of monocotyledonous plants are the members of the orchid family, such as the lily and the daffodil, and the cereal grasses such as wheat and corn.
These, and many other grasses, as well as many other "showy" flowering plants start out life with a single cotyledon, the little leaf-like bit that first pops out of the ground after seed germination, as opposed to the dicots that start out life with two cotyledons.
there are about 200 types
Plants are highly diverse and their are several types of plants. Two major types of plants are Green Algae ( Charophyceans) and Land Plants.From their plants evolve into:Bryophytes: non-vascular plants: [Ex: liverworts, hornworts, mosses]Next diversifying into 2 types of Vascular Plants (Seedless & Seed)Lycophytes, Pterophytes : Seedless Vascular PlantsGymnosperm, Angiosperms: Seed Vascular Plants
It is dicot...
Neither. Monocot and dicot are two classifications of vascular seed plants (the flowering and cone plants) Hornworts are in a very primitive group of plants usually called Lycophytes. The Lycophyta also includes liverworts and mosses. They are the non-vasuclar seedless plants. Since the terms monocot and dicot refer most specifically to the structure of the seed, they do not desribe the seedless plants.
Its most likley Monocot all plants ar monocot only some reverse to dicot
There are two types of flowering plants. These two types of flowering plants are the perennials and the annual flowering plants.
Two types of ocean plants are kelp, and anemones, and etc..
No. Jeera is a dicotyledonous seed
Most of the plants belonging to the monocot family Poaceae. Examples- Maize, Sorghum, Pearl millit etc.
yes, they are flowering plants and produce seed
Riceis the seed of the monocot plants
No, Monocot seedlings typically have one seed-leaf, in contrast to the Dicotos which typically have two seed-leaves.