词条 | Saxifragales |
释义 | Saxifragales plant order Introduction ![]() Order characteristics Saxifragales encompasses a wide variety of plant types distributed throughout the world, including shrubs and trees, such as witch hazel and witch alder (Hamamelidaceae), rock-garden plants such as saxifrage (Saxifragaceae), familiar garden ornamentals such as peonies (peony) (Paeoniaceae), and bushes that yield currants (currant) and gooseberries (gooseberry). Although the order shows wide structural variations, some common traits unite Saxifragales. Flowers in the order are nearly always radially symmetric, with petals that are free rather than fused together, and the seeds typically have abundant endosperm (nutrient tissue). Most members of the order have separate (unfused) carpels, at least toward the apex. Many of the families now included in the order were once considered unrelated and were placed in three different subclasses in the earlier botanical classification systems of the American Arthur Cronquist and the Soviet-Armenian Armen Takhtajan. However, they are now supported as a monophyletic group on the basis of molecular studies. Although the internal relationships among the families are largely unresolved, this has been suggested to be the result of a rapid ancient radiation. The fact that many of the families in the order are quite small and geographically restricted offers support to the ancient radiation hypothesis, and several of the woody families have an extensive fossil history. Major families Crassulaceae, or the stonecrop ( sedum) family, is the largest family in Saxifragales, with 34 genera and about 1,400 species. The family is widespread from tropical to boreal regions but is concentrated in arid regions and is characterized by very thick, fleshy leaves and by water-storage tissues in the leaves and stem. A specialized system of photosynthesis (light capture) adaptive to these kinds of conditions has been named after the family—Crassulacean Acid Metabolism (CAM). Special hairs, aerial roots, and surface cells may enable some species to absorb water directly from the air. Members of the genus Kalanchoe produce plantlets on the indentations of the leaf margins. Flowers in the family are bisexual, with the perianth parts (sepals and petals) in sets of four or five. A nectar-producing gland sits at the base of each of the 3–10 separate carpels. The family also includes widely grown ornamental perennials such as Echeveria and Crassula. The commonly cultivated Crassula ovata (jade plant) is native to South Africa. Sedum (420 species) contains many favourite rock-garden plants, and other species are grown as pot plants. Surprisingly, some species of Crassula have evolved into aquatic plants. Saxifragaceae, with about 33 genera and 540 species, is almost entirely herbaceous. Most species of the family grow in moist woodlands in cold northern regions. Members of the genus Saxifraga (saxifrage) (literally “rock breaker”), with their tenacious ability to thrive on rocky crags in cold, harsh climates, have a tough root system and penetrating taproots. Among the herbaceous families in the order, Saxifragaceae are perhaps the most important horticulturally. Saxifraga, Astilbe, and Heuchera contain many species cultivated in rock and woodland gardens. Flowers are usually bisexual and often somewhat showy, and the leaves vary from simple to compound and are sometimes grouped in a basal rosette. Shoots and leaves of some plants are eaten or brewed like tea. People of the Appalachian Mountains make salads with Saxifraga erosa (mountain lettuce, or deer-tongue). ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Iteaceae consists of the genus Itea, with 18 species. One species of Itea is native to eastern North America, while the rest are native to the area from the Himalayas to Japan and then western Malesia. The North American Itea virginica and the Chinese Itea ilicifolia are cultivated ornamental shrubs. Iteaceae have spirally arranged serrate leaves, rather small flowers with valvate petals in racemose or paniculate clusters, and capsular fruits whose two carpels remain attached by the stigma. ![]() Cercidiphyllaceae comprises a single genus and two deciduous tree species from China and Japan. They are wind-pollinated; the flowers are unisexual and lack perianth parts, and there are separate male and female plants. Both the male and female structures that appear to be flowers are actually clusters of flowers, each flower being reduced to a few stamens or a single carpel. Cercidiphyllum japonicum ( katsura tree) is the largest deciduous tree in Japan, and it is capable of producing strong timber for house and furniture construction. During the Tertiary Period (65.5 to 2.6 million years ago), this family was widely distributed throughout the Northern Hemisphere. |
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