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Journal ArticleDOI

Classical morphological features of centrospermous families

Theo Eckardt
- 01 Mar 1976 - 
- Vol. 126, Iss: 1, pp 5-25
TLDR
The orderCentrospermae (Caryophyllales, Chenopodiales) as treated in A. Englers Syllabus, 12th edition (1964), is compared with several other modern and older systems with the result that no less than 11–13 families are considered to be centrospermous in the strict sense.
Abstract
The orderCentrospermae (Caryophyllales, Chenopodiales) as treated inA. Englers Syllabus, 12th edition (1964), is compared with several other modern and older systems with the result that no less than 11–13 (and more) families are considered to be centrospermous in the strict sense; to these may be added thePolygonales and, doubtfully, thePlumbaginales andBatidales. As indicated by their name “Centrospermae” their main character is the central or basal placentation in combination with campylotropy (or amphitropy) of the ovules, seeds with perisperm, and coiled or curved embryos in peripheral position. Other outstanding features are found in the embryology; the ovules are bitegmic-crassinucellate, a nucellar cap is present, as well as an endostome and air spaces; the pollen is trinucleate. Anomalous secondary thickening in stems and roots often occurs. The pollen morphology, specific P-type sieve-element plastids, and the presence or absence of betalains are also important characters. Other floral features, especially the structure of the gynoecium, the androecium, the perianth and the receptacle, as well as the morphology of the inflorescences are of taxonomic importance. The putative relationships of theCaryophyllidae can perhaps best be resolved on the basis of more detailed morphological investigations (e.g. the so-called apocarpy, the development of the androecium, the pollen morphology, chromosome numbers, etc.).

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A survey of tricolpate (eudicot) phylogenetic relationships

TL;DR: The phylogenetic structure of the tricolpate clade (or eudicots) is presented through a survey of their major subclades, each of which is briefly characterized, and the support for the monophyly of each clade is assessed through citation of the pertinent molecular phylogenetic literature.
Journal ArticleDOI

The classification and geography of the flowering plants: dicotyledons of the class Angiospermae (subclasses Magnoliidae, Ranunculidae, Caryophyllidae, Dilleniidae, Rosidae, Asteridae, and Lamiidae).

TL;DR: A recent review of the classification and geography of the Dicotyledons can be found in this paper, with emphasis on new information published in the last decade, focusing on the recent advances in molecular taxonomy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Disintegrating Portulacaceae: A new familial classification of the suborder Portulacineae (Caryophyllales) based on molecular and morphological data

TL;DR: A revised familial classification of the suborder Portulacineae is proposed with an identification key mainly based on habit and fruit characters, and family diagnoses with information on distribution, taxonomic diversity, and a brief discussion on phylogenetics and classification.
References
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Book

The evolution and classification of flowering plants

TL;DR: The evolution and classification of flowering plants is studied in detail in the book “Flowering plants: Evolution and Classification of Flowers, 2nd Ed.” (2003).