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Give atleast 5 differences between monocot and dicot leaf (its internal structure)?

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Give atleast 5 differences between monocot and dicot leaf (its internal structure)?

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  1. Dicots include nearly all our trees, bushes, vegetable-garden plants (not corn), and most of our wildflowers (not irises and lilies). Dicot leaves are usually net-veined, as in the close-up of the veins in a wild grape leaf at the right. Notice how the larger veins are thicker and straighter, but as veins get smaller and smaller, they tend to snake around.

    Monocots include all grasses and glasslike plants, plus lilies, irises, amaryllises, and some other plant types. Usually, but not always, monocots possessparallel-veined leaves, as typified in the simple blade of fescue grass shown at the right. One example of a monocot which does not have parallel-veined leaves is the Trillium, several species of which are common in moist American forests.

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