The Monocotyledons or monocots are a group of flowering plants, dominating great parts of the earth. Monocots comprise the majority of agricultural plants in terms of biomass produced. There are between 50,000 and 60,000 species within this group; according to IUCN there are 59,300 species.
The largest family in this group (and in the flowering plants) is the orchids (usually taken to be the family Orchidaceae, but sometimes treated at the rank of order), with about twenty thousand species. These have very complex (and striking) flowers, adapted for highly specific insect pollination.
The economically most important family in this group (and in the flowering plants) are the grasses, family Poaceae (Gramineae). These include all the true grains (rice, wheat, maize, etc), the pasture grasses and the bamboos. This family of the true grasses have evolved in another direction, becoming highly specialized for wind pollination. Grasses produce much smaller flowers, which are gathered in highly visible plumes (inflorescences). A further noteworthy, and economically important, family is the palm family Arecaceae (Palmae).
Nevertheless, monocots are a distinctive group. One of the most noticeable traits is that a monocot's flower is trimerous, with the flower parts in threes or in multiples of three. For example, a monocotyledon's flower typically has three, six, or nine petals. Many monocots also have leaves with parallel veins.
Flowers: In monocots, flowers are trimerous (number of flower parts in a whorl in threes) while in dicots the flowers are tetramerous or pentamerous (flower parts are in fours or fives).
Pollen: In monocots, pollen has one furrow or pore while dicots have three.
Seeds: In monocots, the embryo has one cotyledon while the embryo of the dicot has two.
Stems: In monocots, vascular bundles in the stem are scattered, in dicots arranged in a ring.
Roots: In monocots, roots are adventitious, while in dicots they develop from the radicle.
Leaves: In monocots, the major leaf veins are parallel, while in dicots they are reticulate.
However, these differences are not hard and fast: some monocots have characteristics more typical of dicots, and vice-versa. This is in part because "dicots" are a paraphyletic group with respect to monocots, and some dicots may be more closely related to monocots than to other dicots. In particular, several early-branching lineages of "dicots" share "monocot" characteristics, suggesting that these are not defining characters of monocots. When monocots are compared to eudicots, the differences are more concrete.
Taxonomists have considerable latitude in naming this group, as the monocots are a group above the rank of family. Article 16 of the ICBN allows either a descriptive name or a name formed from the name of an included family.
Historically, the monocotyledons were named:
Botanical nomenclature | Plant taxonomy
Едносемеделни | Monocotiledònia | Jednoděložné | Monocotyledon | Enkimbladede | Einkeimblättrige | Üheidulehelised | Unukotiledonaj plantoj | تکلپهایها | Monocotylédone | 외떡잎식물 | חד־פסיגיים | Vienaskilčiai | Monokotiledon | Eenzaadlobbigen | 単子葉植物 | Enfrøbladede planter | Jednoliścienne | Monocotiledónea | Однодольные | Монокотиледоне биљке | Yksisirkkaiset | Enhjärtbladiga växter | พืชใบเลี้ยงเดี่ยว | Thực vật một lá mầm | 單子葉植物綱
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Monocotyledon".
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