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Asterids – Campanulids Spring 2012
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Fig. 8.83
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Asterids – Campanulids “Basal” Asterids Order Cornales Order Ericales Lamiids Order Solanales Order Gentianales Order Lamiales Campanulids Order Apiales *Apiaceae – carrots, parsley Order Dipsacales Caprifoliaceae – honeysuckle Adoxaceae – viburnum, elderberry Order Asterales Campanulaceae – lobelias, bellflowers *Asteraceae – sunflowers *family required for recognition
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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) Required taxa: family only
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Apiaceae Anethum Zizia Cicuta Daucus
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Apiaceae reduced calyx inflexed petals inferior ovary 2 carpels stylopodium
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Apiaceae schizocarps
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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
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What part of the plant are you eating? Apiaceae anise dillcaraway
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What part of the plant are you eating? Apiaceae
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What part of the plant are you eating? Apiaceae parsley
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What part of the plant are you eating? Apiaceae parsnipcarrot
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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
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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
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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
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Adoxaceae Adoxa Sambucus Viburnum
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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
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Adoxaceae: Sambucus -herbaceous, shrubby or arborescent -leaves pinnately compound -inflorescences compound cymes -corolla broadly spreading -fruit a drupe containing 3 pits
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Campanulids: Asterales: Campanulaceae (The Bellflower or Lobelia Family) Widespread in northern temperate and sub-tropical regions; also in the montane tropics Mostly herbs; occasionally woody; with laticifers/latex and milky sap; leaves usually alternate Diversity: ca. 2,200 species in 79-84 genera Flowers: With a hypanthium; sepals 5, connate; petals 5, connate, forming a bell-shaped or bilabiate (or 1-lipped) corolla; stamens usually 5, distinct to distally connate, usually attached to a disk at apex of ovary; carpels 2-5, connate, inferior (or half-inferior) ovary; fruit a loculicidal or poricidal capsule, or berry Significant features: pollen shed in a tube formed by connate anther parts; style (with pollen collecting hairs near the apex) grows through tube Special uses: Mostly ornamentals (Campanula, Lobelia, Codonopsis, Platycodon) Family not required
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Campanulaceae Campanula Lobelia Platycodon pollen plunger Downingia
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Campanulaceae: Lobelia -herbs -flowers resupinate -calyx 5-parted, with a short tube -corolla with a straight tube split on the apparently upper side, somewhat 2-lipped, the upper lip with 2 lobes, the lower with 3 lobes -stamens free from the corolla, united into a tube by the anthers but also commonly by the filaments -capsule 2-locular, opening at the top
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Campanulids: Asterales: Asteraceae (The Sunflower Family – Largest 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
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The ultimate pseudanthium
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Asteraceae disk + ray florets phyllaries Berlandiera Pseudanthium = false flower
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Asteraceae Floral Terminology: Head (= capitulum) Pseudanthium Involucre Phyllaries Floret Ligulate or ray floret Disk floret
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Asteraceae: ray flower/floret
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Asteraceae: disk flower/floret
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disk flowers only ray flowers only ray and disk flowers Three flower arrangements
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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
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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
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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
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-heads in branched clusters -heads of ray flowers -flowers yellow -ca. 1500 species Senecio
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What part of the plant are you eating? Asteraceae artichoke
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What part of the plant are you eating? Asteraceae chicory
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What part of the plant are you eating? endive Asteraceae lettuce
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What part of the plant are you eating? safflower oil Asteraceae
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What part of the plant are you eating? Asteraceae sunflower
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Asteraceae Economic plants and products: Medicinal plants Camomile (Athemis)
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Asteraceae Economic plants and products: Weedy plants: Dandelion (Taraxacum)
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Asteraceae Economic plants and products: Weedy plants: Ragweed (Ambrosia)
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Asteraceae Economic plants and products: Ornamentals: Chrysanthemum (“mums;” Chrysanthemum) Dahlia (Dahlia) Daisy (Chrysanthemum) Marigold (Tagetes) Sunflower (Helianthus) Zinnia (Zinnia)
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