The endosperm is more abundant in the mature seed of a monocot.
The five parts of a seed are the seed coat, endosperm, embryo, cotyledons, and radicle. The seed coat provides protection, the endosperm stores nutrients for the embryo, the embryo is the young plant-to-be, the cotyledons are the first leaves to emerge, and the radicle is the embryonic root.
The embryo in the seed get food from endosperm and perisperm.
Embryo, endosperm, and seed coat.
A monocot stores its food supply in the endosperm of the seed. Dicots store the bulk of their food in the two cotyledons.
Seed coat: This is the protective outer covering of a seed. Embryo: The embryo is the young, developing plant contained within the seed. Endosperm: The endosperm is a nutrient-rich tissue that provides food for the growing embryo.
Seed coat, embryo and endosperm
The Seed coat, endosperm and embryo.
Seed coat, micropyle, endosperm and embryo are major parts of a seed. The seed coat protects, micropyle allows water to move in, endosperm nourishes the embryo and on germination a new plant emerges from the embryo.
The endosperm is more abundant in the mature seed of a monocot.
endosperm :) (well is its a seed anyways)
endosperm :) (well is its a seed anyways)
Endosperm is the tissue produced inside the seeds of most flowering plants around the time that the egg (seed) is fertilized. It surrounds the seed embryo and provides nutrition in the form of starch, and can also contain oils and protein. This makes endosperm an important source of nutrition in human diet. For example, wheat endosperm is ground into flour for bread. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endosperm
No, triploid endosperm is in angiosperms only. Gymnosperm means "Naked Seed."
The five parts of a seed are the seed coat, endosperm, embryo, cotyledons, and radicle. The seed coat provides protection, the endosperm stores nutrients for the embryo, the embryo is the young plant-to-be, the cotyledons are the first leaves to emerge, and the radicle is the embryonic root.
The embryo in the seed get food from endosperm and perisperm.
Embryo, endosperm, and seed coat.