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Brassicaceae or Cruciferae “The Mustard Family” By Levi Eggermont
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Brassicaceae Contains 348 genera and over 3000 taxa. Most taxa of the Brassicaceae share a suite of glycosinolate compounds knows as 'mustard oils' that.

Jan 19, 2016

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Page 1: Brassicaceae Contains 348 genera and over 3000 taxa. Most taxa of the Brassicaceae share a suite of glycosinolate compounds knows as 'mustard oils' that.

Brassicaceaeor

Cruciferae

“The Mustard Family”

By Levi Eggermont

Page 2: Brassicaceae Contains 348 genera and over 3000 taxa. Most taxa of the Brassicaceae share a suite of glycosinolate compounds knows as 'mustard oils' that.

Brassicaceae

• Contains 348 genera and over 3000 taxa.• Most taxa of the Brassicaceae share a suite of

glycosinolate compounds knows as 'mustard oils' that produce the pungent odor that one associates with 'cole' crops, such as cabbage and broccoli, and this can be useful for family recognition.

Page 3: Brassicaceae Contains 348 genera and over 3000 taxa. Most taxa of the Brassicaceae share a suite of glycosinolate compounds knows as 'mustard oils' that.

Brassicaceae Notes

• However, the floral structure of this large and diverse family is quite distinctive, as are the fruits.

• The perianth is biseriate with each whorl, the calyx and corolla, four-parted with no connation. Considered four-merous.

Page 4: Brassicaceae Contains 348 genera and over 3000 taxa. Most taxa of the Brassicaceae share a suite of glycosinolate compounds knows as 'mustard oils' that.

Brassicaceae notes

• The petals are usually positioned opposite one another and, on face view, the corolla forms a cross ('Cruciferae' = 'cross former').

• The stamens are often tetradynamous (six stamens, two shorter than others) and the fruit is a bilocular capsule that appears to be derived, like other floral whorls, from a four-parted ancestry that followed an evolutionary path similar to that depicted (redrawn from G. H. M. Lawrence, Taxonomy of Vascular Plants) below:

Page 5: Brassicaceae Contains 348 genera and over 3000 taxa. Most taxa of the Brassicaceae share a suite of glycosinolate compounds knows as 'mustard oils' that.

Brassicaceae notes

• Whatever the specific process, the resulting gynoecium of the Brassicaceae is bilocular with an unusal septum - the replum - that is probably derived from ancestral carpels.

Page 6: Brassicaceae Contains 348 genera and over 3000 taxa. Most taxa of the Brassicaceae share a suite of glycosinolate compounds knows as 'mustard oils' that.

Brassicaceae notes

• The replum is an excellent key character for the family because it tends to remain attached to the pedicel after fruit dehiscence.

• Many taxa of the family also show a common inflorescence type, a standard raceme.

Page 7: Brassicaceae Contains 348 genera and over 3000 taxa. Most taxa of the Brassicaceae share a suite of glycosinolate compounds knows as 'mustard oils' that.

Cardamine concatenata

Cut-leaved toothwort

Page 8: Brassicaceae Contains 348 genera and over 3000 taxa. Most taxa of the Brassicaceae share a suite of glycosinolate compounds knows as 'mustard oils' that.

Distribution of Cardamine concatenata

Page 9: Brassicaceae Contains 348 genera and over 3000 taxa. Most taxa of the Brassicaceae share a suite of glycosinolate compounds knows as 'mustard oils' that.

Alliaria petiolata

Page 10: Brassicaceae Contains 348 genera and over 3000 taxa. Most taxa of the Brassicaceae share a suite of glycosinolate compounds knows as 'mustard oils' that.

Distribution of Allaria petilata

Page 11: Brassicaceae Contains 348 genera and over 3000 taxa. Most taxa of the Brassicaceae share a suite of glycosinolate compounds knows as 'mustard oils' that.

Sources• http://plants.usda.gov/java/ClassificationServlet?source=display&classid=Brassicaceae• http://www.ars-grin.gov/cgi-bin/npgs/html/family.pl?166• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brassicaceae• http://plants.usda.gov/java/profile?symbol=CACO26• http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/invasives/terrestrialplants/herbaceous/garlicmustard.html• http://www.invasivespeciesinfo.gov/plants/garlicmustard.shtml• Vascular Plant Taxonomy 4th Edition, Dirk R. Walters, David J. Keil. P. 238• Manuel of Vascular Plants of Northeastern United States and Adjacent Canada, Gleason and

Chronquist. 1991. P. 191