An orange tree is a dicot, as it belongs to the category of flowering plants that have two seed leaves when germinating.
A birch tree is a dicot because it belongs to the class Magnoliopsida, which includes dicotyledonous flowering plants. Dicots have two seed leaves, net-like veins in the leaves, and flower parts in multiples of four or five.
"Santol" in English is known as cottonfruit or wild mangosteen.
A fir tree is considered a gymnosperm, which is neither a monocot nor a dicot. Gymnosperms are a distinct group of plants that produce seeds but do not have flowers or fruits like angiosperms (dicots and monocots). Fir trees belong to the Gymnosperm phylum.
A mesquite tree is a dicot. Dicots are characterized by having two seed leaves when germinating, whereas monocots have only one seed leaf. Mesquite trees belong to the Fabaceae family, which is a group of dicot plants.
monocot
fiburous
Santol leaves are typically green in color, with a glossy appearance. The shade of green may vary depending on the age of the leaves and the specific variety of the santol tree.
santol
MONOCOT
Dicot
Dicot ;)
Dicot
An orange tree is a dicot, as it belongs to the category of flowering plants that have two seed leaves when germinating.
A birch tree is a dicot because it belongs to the class Magnoliopsida, which includes dicotyledonous flowering plants. Dicots have two seed leaves, net-like veins in the leaves, and flower parts in multiples of four or five.
The Tagalog or Filipino name for fire tree is "balayong" or "santol."
Usually orange trees are torn down at the Burger King factory. This involves both monocot and dicot to both be in an orange tree. The orange tree is then sliced into pieces, the overall branches are then curled into a seed-like substance that allows more factories (who take care of orange trees such as Burger King) to come up with the conclusion that an orange tree is both a monocot and a dicot. Hope I helped. Good luck!