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Rosidae I

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those with hypogynous flowers usually bear a characteristic fleshy nectar ring ... Order Rosales. Family Crassulaceae. consists of about 35 genera and 1500 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Rosidae I


1
Rosidae I
  • Rosales - Santalales

2
Characteristics of Rosidae
  • largest subclass of flowering plants with 18
    orders, 114 families, and ca. 58000 species (over
    1/3 of the dicot families)
  • almost 75 of the species are classified in five
    orders Fabales, Euphorbiales, Myrtales, Rosales
    and Sapindales
  • basal members are comparable to the primitive
    Magnoliidae while most advanced share features
    with members of the Asteridae

3
  • members of the Rosidae tend to have perigynous or
    epigynous flowers
  • those with hypogynous flowers usually bear a
    characteristic fleshy nectar ring associated with
    ovary
  • members of the Rosidae occur in nearly all
    terrestrial ecosystems
  • primitive orders with apocarpous gynoecia, orders
    primarily adapted to an aquatic, hemiparasitic,
    or parasitic existence (Rosidae I)

4
Orders of the Rosidae
  • Rosales
  • Fabales
  • Proteales
  • Podostemales
  • Haloragales
  • Myrtales
  • Rhizophorales
  • Cornales
  • Santalales
  • Rafflesiales
  • Celastrales
  • Euphorbiales
  • Rhamnales
  • Linales
  • Polygalales
  • Sapindales
  • Geraniales
  • Apiales

5
Crassulaceae
  • family of succulent herbs and small shrubs
  • Distribution distributed throughout the world,
    mainly in warm, dry regions but centered in South
    Africa
  • like the other two succulent families (Aizoaceae
    and Cactaceae), they are found in hot, exposed,
    rocky habitats

6
  • Crassulaceae have a wider range of adaptability
    species of Sempervirum and some of Sedum are
    frost-hardy and some species of Crassula and
    Sedum live in plentiful water supply, one
    Crassula (C. helmsii) being aquatic

7
Diagnostic Features
  • perennial plants, soft-wooded and rarely larger
    than small shrublets
  • Lvs. always /- fleshy and mostly entire,
    exstipulate and commonly packed tightly in
    rosettes which may reach the extreme of surface
    reduction in a sphere in Crassula columnaris
  • full range of xerophytic specializations
    surfaces covered in papillae, hairs, bristles or
    wax

8
Crassula columnaris
9
  • vegetative reproduction from offsets,
    adventitious buds and fallen leaves is common
  • Flws. small but massed in showy corymbs or
    panicles, structurally simple
  • Perianth normally five (3-30) free sepals and
    petals
  • Androecium one or two whorls of stamens, equal
    to the number of petals

10
  • Gynoecium ovary superior, unilocular
  • Fruit cluster of follicles

11
Classification
  • Division Magnoliophyta
  • Class Magnoliopsida
  • Subclass Rosidae
  • Order Rosales
  • Family Crassulaceae

12
Classification
  • consists of about 35 genera and 1500 species
  • divided in to two groups
  • stamens as many as petals and lvs. opp. (Crassula
    and Rochea)
  • stamens twice as many as petals and lvs. alt. or
    opp. (Kalanchoe, Sedum, Sempervirum)
  • closely related to the non-succulent
    Saxifragaceae

13
Economic Uses
  • valued mainly as ornamentals
  • stonecrops (Sedum) for rock gardens
  • houseleeks (Sempervirum) for alpine gardens
  • Echeveria for summer bedding
  • Kalanchoe and Rochea as house plants and
    florists flowers

14
Saxifragaceae (sensu stricto)
  • large and widespread family consisting mainly of
    perennial herbs
  • in the broad sense, Saxifragaceae consists of
    gooseberries and currants as well as popular
    garden flowers like hydrangeas and saxifrages
  • Distribution on its wide interpretation, the
    family is almost cosmopolitan majority of the
    species are found in the north temperate zone
    with representation in the tropics, South Africa,
    Australia, and New Zealand scanty

15
Diagnostic Features
  • Lvs. alt. opp. or all basal, simple,
    exstipulate
  • Infl. terminal panicles or racemes
  • Flws. perfect, actinomorphic, with hypanthium
  • Perianth sepals 5, connate, petals 5, distinct
  • Androecium stamens 5-10, distinct
  • Gynoecium 2, distinct to connate, ovary
    superior or inferior
  • Fruit capsule or cluster of follicles

16
Classification
  • Division Magnoliophyta
  • Class Magnoliopsida
  • Subclass Rosidae
  • Order Rosales
  • Family Saxifragaceae

17
Classification
  • consists of ca. 40 genera and 650 species with 22
    genera and 165 species in North America north of
    Mexico
  • classification of Saxifragaceae is extremely
    controversial
  • woody genera often included in the Saxifragaceae
    (sensu lato) are now included in other families
    like the Grossulariaceae
  • the genus Penthorum often included in the
    Crassulaceae or its own family, the Penthoraceae
    is anomalous

18
Classification
  • Saxifragaceae (sensu stricto) is divided into 2
    subfamilies
  • Parnassioidae (staminodes present, flws.
    solitary, styles/stigmas appressed to fused,
    capsules loculicidal)
  • Saxifragoideae (staminodes absent, flws. 2 or
    more, styles/stigmas mostly free, capsules
    septicidal or circumcissle)

19
Economic Importance
  • Saxifragaceae (sensu lato) consists of the genus
    Ribes (Grossulariaceae) which has gooseberries,
    black, red, and white currants which are widely
    grown for their edible fruits
  • many other genera such as Tolmeia, Tiarella,
    Saxifraga, and Heuchera are grown as garden
    ornamentals
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