Top Banner
Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013
39

Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Jan 19, 2016

Download

Documents

Alan Holland
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Asterids – Campanulids

Spring 2013

Page 2: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Fig. 8.83

Page 3: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids

Order Ericales

LamiidsOrder SolanalesOrder GentianalesOrder Lamiales

CampanulidsOrder Apiales

*Apiaceae – carrots, parsleyOrder Dipsacales

Caprifoliaceae – honeysuckleAdoxaceae – viburnum, elderberry

Order Asterales*Asteraceae – sunflowers

*family required for recognition

Page 4: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Asterids -- Campanulids:

Apiales: Apiaceae(The Carrot Family; Umbelliferae)

• Nearly cosmopolitan• Usually herbs; aromatic with ethereal oils, terpenoids, saponins and

other compounds; leaves alternate with sheathing bases; internodes usually hollow

• Diversity: 3,780 species in 434 genera• Flowers: Small, inconspicuous. Sepals 5, distinct, very reduced;

petals 5, distinct but developing from a ring-like primordium, usually inflexed; stamens 5, filaments distinct; carpels 2, connate, inferior ovary; fruit a schizocarp, the 2 dry segments (mericarps) attached to an entire to deeply forked central stalk (carpophore)

• Significant features: Aromatic parts; inflorescences usually involucrate compound umbels (sometimes simple or condensed into a head); styles basally swollen to form a nectar-secreting structure (stylopodium) atop the ovary; seeds with oil glands

• Special uses: Herbs and spices, vegetables (carrot, Daucus; celery – Apium; parsnip - Pastinaca), parsley (Petroselinum)

• Family required

Page 5: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Apiaceae

Anethum

Zizia

Cicuta

Daucus

Page 6: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Apiaceae

• reduced calyx• inflexed petals• inferior ovary• 2 carpels• stylopodium

Page 7: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Apiaceae

schizocarps

Page 8: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Apiaceae: Daucus-bristly annuals or biennials with pinnately dissected leaves-umbels compound-involucre of more or less conspicuous pinnate bracts-flowers all or nearly all perfect, mostly with pedicels-mericarps with 5 slender, bristly 1° ribs and 4 winged 2° ribs

involucre

Page 9: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

What part of the plant are you eating?

Apiaceae

anise

dillcaraway

Page 10: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

What part of the plant are you eating?

Apiaceae

Page 11: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

What part of the plant are you eating?

Apiaceae

parsley

Page 12: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

What part of the plant are you eating?

Apiaceae

parsnipcarrot

Page 13: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Asterids -- Campanulids:

Dipsacales: Caprifoliaceae(The Honeysuckle Family)

• Widely distributed, especially in northern temperate regions

• Herbs, shrubs, small trees and lianas; leaves opposite, simple

• Diversity: 810 species in 36 genera (in the broad sense)• Flowers: Sepals 5, connate; petals 5, connate, often with 2

upper and 3 lower lobes or 1 upper and 4 lower lobes; stamens (1-) 4-5, filaments adnate to the corolla; carpels 2-5, connate, style elongate, stigma capitate, inferior ovary; fruit a capsule, berry, drupe, or achene.

• Significant features: Flowers bilateral; large, spiny pollen• Special uses: Ornamentals: honeysuckle (Lonicera),

Weigela, Symphoricarpus (snowberry)• Family not required

Page 14: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Caprifoliaceae: Lonicera

-erect or climbing shrubs-leaves entire-calyx teeth very short-corolla tubular or funnelform, often more or less irregular-fruit a several-seeded berry

Page 15: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Campanulids:

Dipsacales: Adoxaceae(The Elderberry family)

• Widespread in temperate regions of the N. Hemisphere but also in mountainous regions of S. Hemisphere

• Small trees, shrubs or perennial herbs; leaves opposite, simple or trifoliolate or pinnately compound

• Diversity: 245 species in 5 genera• Flowers: Bisexual, radial, small; sepals 2-5, connate,

reduced; petals 4-5, connate, well developed but with a usually short tube; stamens 5, pollen with a reticulate exine; carpels 3-5, style(s) short; fruit a drupe, with 1-5 pits

• Significant features: inflorescences determinate, umbellate, showy

• Special uses: ornamentals (Viburnum, Sambucus), also jellies and wines

• Family not required

Page 16: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Adoxaceae

Adoxa

Sambucus

Viburnum

Page 17: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Adoxaceae: Viburnum

-shrubs or small trees-leaves simple-inflorescences compound cymes-flowers usually white (rarely pink)-corolla spreading, deeply 5-lobed-ovary 3-carpellate, but two abort-fruit a 1-locular, 1-seeded drupe

Page 18: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Adoxaceae: Sambucus(elderberry)

-herbaceous, shrubby or arborescent-leaves pinnately compound-inflorescences compound cymes-corolla broadly spreading-fruit a drupe containing 3 pits

Page 19: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Campanulids:

Asterales: Asteraceae(The Sunflower Family – Most diverse family of angiosperms)

• Cosmopolitan• Herbs or shrubs (trees); resin canals or laticifers often present• Diversity: 23,600 species in ca. 1,600 genera• Flowers: Sepals highly modified to form a scaly or hairy pappus;

petals 5, connate, forming a tubular, bilabiate, radial or bilateral corolla; anthers fused into a tube around the style (syngenesious); pollen plunger mechanism present; carpels 2, connate, inferior ovary; fruit an achene (cypsela), often with adherent pappus (calyx parts)

• Significant features: flowers densely arranged into indeterminate heads (capitula), surrounded by involucral bracts (phyllaries), often with differentiation in inner flowers and outer flowers (disk and ray flowers); various pollination and dispersal syndromes

• Special uses: Food plants: sunflower (Helianthus), chicory (Cichorium), artichoke (Cynara), lettuce (Lactuca); many ornamentals (marigolds, zinnias, chrysanthemum, dahlia, etc.).

• Family only

Page 20: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

The ultimate pseudanthium

Page 21: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Asteraceae

• disk + ray florets

phyllaries Berlandiera

Pseudanthium =false flower

Page 22: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Asteraceae

Floral Terminology:

• Head (= capitulum)

• Pseudanthium

• Involucre

• Phyllaries

• Floret

• Ligulate or ray floret

• Disk floret

Page 23: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Asteraceae: ray flower/floret

Page 24: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Asteraceae: disk flower/floret

Page 25: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

disk flowers only

ray flowers only

ray and disk flowers

Three flowerarrangements

Page 26: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Asteraceae: Taraxacum

-perennial or biennial herbs-heads many-flowered, large, solitary on a slender hollow scape, of only ray flowers-pappus feathery, becoming raised on a stalk as the achene matures-involucre reflexed at fruit maturity for wind dispersal

Page 27: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Asteraceae: Helianthus-coarse, stout herbs-involucre of overlapping phyllaries-heads solitary or in a corymb, many-flowered, with both ray and disk flowers, the ray flowers with a yellow corolla-chaff persistent-pappus easily deciduous, of 2 thin scales, sometimes 2 or more smaller scales also present

Page 28: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Asteraceae: Solidago-perennial herbs-stem leaves sessile or nearly so-heads small, mostly in racemes or clusters-heads few- to many-flowered, mostly of ray flowers-ray flowers usually 1-20 per head, pistillate-pappus simple, of equal fine bristles-achenes nearly terete

Page 29: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

-heads in branched clusters-heads of ray flowers-flowers yellow-ca. 1500 species

Senecio

Page 30: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

What part of the plant are you eating?

Asteraceae

artichoke

Page 31: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

What part of the plant are you eating?

Asteraceae

chicory

Page 32: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

What part of the plant are you eating?

endive

Asteraceae

lettuce

Page 33: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

What part of the plant are you eating?

safflower oil

Asteraceae

Page 34: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

What part of the plant are you eating?

Asteraceae

sunflower

Page 35: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Asteraceae

Economic plants and products:

Medicinal plants• Camomile (Athemis)

Page 36: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Asteraceae

Economic plants and products:

Weedy plants:• Dandelion (Taraxacum)

Page 37: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Asteraceae

Economic plants and products:

Weedy plants:• Ragweed (Ambrosia)

Page 38: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Asteraceae

Economic plants and products:

Ornamentals:• Chrysanthemum

(“mums;” Chrysanthemum)• Dahlia (Dahlia)• Daisy (Chrysanthemum)• Marigold (Tagetes)• Sunflower (Helianthus)• Zinnia (Zinnia)

Page 39: Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2013. Fig. 8.83 Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order.

Ecological Roles