Monocotyledon facts for kids
Quick facts for kids Monocotyledons |
|
---|---|
Daylily flower, with three flower parts in each whorl | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | |
Division: | |
Class: |
Monocotyledons
|
Monocotyledons are a class of flowering plants (angiosperms), whose embryo (seed) store only one cotyledon. The APG II system recognises a clade called "monocots" but does not assign it to a taxonomic rank.
You can recognize a monocot by its leaves: they have long parallel veins running down the leaf. In contrast, dicot plant leaves have a complex netted vein pattern on their leaves.
Monocots usually have a fibrous root system.
Clade diagram
Angiosperms |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Images for kids
-
Allium crenulatum (Asparagales), an onion, with typical monocot perianth and parallel leaf venation
-
Roystonea regia palm (Arecales) stems showing anomalous secondary growth in monocots, with characteristic fibrous roots
-
Illustrations of cotyledons by John Ray 1682, after Malpighi
See also
In Spanish: Monocotiledóneas para niños