Dicotyledon vs Crassulacean - What's the difference?
dicotyledon | crassulacean |
(botany) A plant whose seedling has two cotyledons.
(botany, historical) Any plant in what used to be the Dicotyledones .
Of or pertaining to the family Crassulaceae of dicotyledons.
* {{quote-news, year=2009, date=May 31, author=Dominique Browning, title=Gardening Books, work=New York Times
, passage=His description of crassulacean acid metabolism, wherein cacti, yuccas, agaves and sedums open their stomata at night when it’s cooler in order to “bind carbon dioxide on special molecules much like we bind oxygen on hemoglobin in our blood” had me on edge for hours. }}
As a noun dicotyledon
is (botany) a plant whose seedling has two cotyledons.As an adjective crassulacean is
of or pertaining to the family crassulaceae of dicotyledons.dicotyledon
English
Noun
(en noun)- Dicotyledons and monocotyledons together make up the flowering plants, the angiosperms.
Synonyms
* dicot * magnoliopsid (in the Cronquist System)Derived terms
* dicotyledonousSee also
* ("dicotyledon" on Wikipedia) * monocotyledon * eudicot * APGcrassulacean
English
Adjective
(-)citation