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  2. Monocotyledon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monocotyledon

    Many monocots are herbaceous and do not have the ability to increase the width of a stem (secondary growth) via the same kind of vascular cambium found in non-monocot woody plants. [34] However, some monocots do have secondary growth; because this does not arise from a single vascular cambium producing xylem inwards and phloem outwards, it is ...

  3. List of alismatid families - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_alismatid_families

    The alismatid monocots are a group of 15 interrelated families of flowering plants, named for their largest order, Alismatales. [a] Like other monocots, they usually have a single embryonic leaf in their seeds, scattered vascular systems, leaves with parallel veins, flowers with parts in threes or multiples of three, and roots that can develop in more than one place along the stems. [6]

  4. List of lilioid families - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_lilioid_families

    Asparagus comes from a Latin plant name. 120 genera, worldwide, except in the eastern Amazon basin and some deserts: Trees, shrubs or herbaceous plants that grow in soil or rarely on other plants. Asparagus and Agave have long histories of use in food and drink, while sisal is used for rope-making.

  5. Poaceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poaceae

    In the Aristida genus for example, one species (A. longifolia) is C3 but the approximately 300 other species are C4. As another example, the whole tribe of Andropogoneae, which includes maize, sorghum, sugar cane, "Job's tears", and bluestem grasses, is C4. [14] Around 46 percent of grass species are C4 plants. [15]

  6. Zingiberales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zingiberales

    Zingiberales are one of an ecologically and morphologically diverse and species-rich order of monocots, with one of the most distinct floral morphology. [6] [7] [8] They are large rhizomatous herbaceous plants but lacking an aerial stem, except when flowering.

  7. Cortex (botany) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cortex_(botany)

    In botany, a cortex is an outer layer of a stem or root in a vascular plant, lying below the epidermis but outside of the vascular bundles. [1] The cortex is composed mostly of large thin-walled parenchyma cells of the ground tissue system and shows little to no structural differentiation. [ 2 ]

  8. Plant stem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plant_stem

    The shoot apex in monocot stems is more elongated. Leaf sheathes grow up around it, protecting it. This is true to some extent of almost all monocots. Monocots rarely produce secondary growth and are therefore seldom woody, with palms and bamboo being notable exceptions. However, many monocot stems increase in diameter via anomalous secondary ...

  9. Amaryllidaceae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amaryllidaceae

    The Amaryllidaceae are a family of herbaceous, mainly perennial and bulbous (rarely rhizomatous) flowering plants in the monocot order Asparagales. The family takes its name from the genus Amaryllis and is commonly known as the amaryllis family. The leaves are usually linear, and the flowers are usually bisexual and symmetrical, arranged in ...