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2.7.04 Angiosperm Families

The document discusses four major angiosperm families: Orchidaceae, Poaceae, Asteraceae, and Fabaceae. It provides details on their floral formulas, characteristics, and examples. Orchids are one of the most species-rich groups, often with modified flowers, and many are fly-pollinated. Grasses are monocots with flowers arranged in spikelets. Asters and legumes are two of the largest families known for their diversity and importance.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
29 views8 pages

2.7.04 Angiosperm Families

The document discusses four major angiosperm families: Orchidaceae, Poaceae, Asteraceae, and Fabaceae. It provides details on their floral formulas, characteristics, and examples. Orchids are one of the most species-rich groups, often with modified flowers, and many are fly-pollinated. Grasses are monocots with flowers arranged in spikelets. Asters and legumes are two of the largest families known for their diversity and importance.

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studyhopes4u
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© © All Rights Reserved
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2.7.

4: Angiosperm Families
Learning Objectives
Interpret a floral formula.
Describe the characteristics used to identify each of the four largest angiosperm families.

Knowing who is related to whom in the plant world can provide important information. Often, closely related organisms will have
similar life history traits, such as defense compounds or other secondary metabolites. Identifying which family an unknown plant
belongs to might provide insight into potential interactions with other organisms (see Orchidaceae below), its capability to resist
particular environmental conditions or stressors, its edibility or toxicity, or whether it produces compounds that might be used
medicinally.
For example, plants like poison oak (Toxicodendron diversilobum) and poison ivy (Toxicodendron radicans) are in the family
Anacardiaceae and produce an oil called urushiol. This oil causes a (sometimes severe) allergic reaction in many people, resulting
in an itchy, blistering rash. Mango (Mangifera indica) and cashew (Anacardium occidentale). also belong to this family, but these
are not known for giving itchy rashes. However, as someone who is quite allergic to poison oak, I unknowingly ate a mango with
the skin on and broke out in a rash all around my mouth and lower face, just like how I react to touching poison oak. Indeed,
cashews are just the seed of the cashew fruit. The rest of the fruit and seed coat are removed due to the urushiol content.
Additionally, while there are over 350,000 species of flowering plants, there are only around 400 families. Being able to quickly
narrow an unknown plant to family is an essential skill in plant identification. So how can we tell who belongs to the same family
among plants? For flowering plants, we can use floral formulas.

Floral Formulas
Since there are so many terms about flowers, and at the same time, flower structure and diversity always were of immense
importance in botany, two specific ways were developed to make flower description more compact. First is a flower formula. This
is an approach where every part of flower is designated with a specific letter, numbers of parts with digits, and some other features
(whorls, fusion, position) with other signs.
Symmetry: * means radial symmetry, while X means bilateral symmetry.
Whorls: K is the calyx, C is the corolla, A is the androecium, and G is the gynoecium. The number that follows each letter
represents the number of parts in that whorl. For the gynoecium, a line under the number indicates an inferior ovary, while a
line above the number indicates a superior ovary.
Fusion: In most representations, connation is indicated by circling the number, while adnation is indicated by drawing a line
connecting the numbers of the fused whorls.
Here are a few examples of floral formulas, followed by their interpretation:
∗K4 C4 A2+4 G(2) : flower actinomorphic, with four sepals, four petals and six stamens in two whorls, ovary superior, with
–––

two fused carpels


↑ K(5) [ C(1,2,2)A2,2 ] G(2×2) : flower zygomorphic, with five fused sepals, five unequal fused petals, two-paired stamens
––––––

attached to petals, superior ovary with two subdivided carpels


∗ K(5) C(5) [ A5 G(3) ] : actinomorphic flower with five fused sepals and five fused petals, five stamens attached to pistil, ovary
–––

inferior, with three fused carpels


The following signs are used to enrich formulas:
PLUS “+” is used to show different whorls; minus “−” shows variation; “∨” = “or”
BRACKETS “[]” and “()” show fusion. In most representations, connation is indicated by circling the fused whorl, while adnation
is indicated by drawing a line underneath the formula connecting those whorls.
COMMA “,” shows inequality of flower parts in one whorl
MULTIPLICATION “×” shows splitting
INFINITY “∞” shows indefinite number of more than 12 parts

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Flower diagram is a graphical way of flower description. This diagram is a kind of cross-section of the flower. Frequently, the
structure of pistil is not shown on the diagram. Also, diagrams sometimes contain signs for the description of main stem (axis) and
flower-related leaf (bract). The best way to show how to draw diagram is also graphical (Figure 2.7.4.1); formula of the flower
shown there is ∗K C A G .
5 5 5 (5)
–––

Figure 2.7.4.1 : How to draw a diagram (graphical explanation): compare numbers on plant and on diagram. On the left of the
image, a simplified aerial view of the flower represents the floral diagram. In the center is a star-like 5-lobed stigma surrounded by
5 4-lobed anthers. There are 5 pink crescent shapes that form a circle around this (the petals) and 5 pale green crescents that form a
circle around these (the calyx). Three darker green, bracket like shapes represent leaves and a single dark green circle represents the
peduncle.

Review of Terms and Formula Designations


FLOWER PARTS occur in whorls in the following order—sepals, petals, stamens, pistils.
(The only exceptions are flowers of Eupomatia with stamens then perianth, Lacandonia with pistils then stamens, and some
monocots like Triglochin, where stamens in several whorls connect with tepals.)
PEDICEL flower stem
RECEPTACLE base of flower where other parts attach
HYPANTHIUM cup-shaped receptacle (Figure 2.7.4.2)
PERIANTH = CALYX + COROLLA
SEPALS small and green, collectively called the CALYX, formula: K
PETALS often large and showy, collectively called the COROLLA, formula: C
TEPALS used when sepals and petals are not distinguishable, they form SIMPLE PERIANTH, formula: P
ANDROECIUM collective term for stamens: formula: A
STAMEN = FILAMENT + ANTHER
ANTHER structure containing pollen grains
FILAMENT structure connecting anther to receptacle
GYNOECIUM collective term for pistils/carpels, formula: G. Gynoecium can be composed of:
1. A single CARPEL = simple PISTIL, this is MONOMERY
2. Two or more fused CARPELS = compound PISTIL, this is SYNCARPY
3. Two or more unfused CARPELS = two or more simple PISTILS, this is APOCARPY
(Note that variant #4, several compound pistils, does not exist in nature.)
To determine the number of CARPELS in a compound PISTIL, count LOCULES, points of placentation, number of
STYLES, STIGMA and OVARY lobes.PISTIL Collective term for carpel(s). The terms CARPEL and PISTIL are equivalent
when there is no fusion, if fusion occurs then you have 2 or more CARPELS united into one PISTIL.
CARPEL structure enclosing ovules, may correspond with locules or placentas

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OVARY basal position of pistil where OVULES are located. The ovary develops into the fruit; OVULES develop into seeds
after fertilization.
LOCULE chamber containg OVULES
PLACENTA place of attachment of OVULE(S) within ovary
STIGMA receptive surface for pollen
STYLE structure connecting ovary and stigma
FLOWER Floral unit with sterile, male and female zones
ACTINOMORPHIC FLOWER A flower having multiple planes of symmetry, also called radially symmetrical, formula:

ZYGOMORPHIC FLOWER A flower having only one plane of symmetry, also called bilaterally symmetrical, formula: ↑
PERFECT FLOWER A flower having both sexes
MALE / FEMALE FLOWER A flower having one sex, formula: ♂ / ♀
MONOECIOUS PLANTS A plant with unisexual flowers with both sexes on the same plant
DIOECIOUS PLANTS A plant with unisexual flowers with one sex on each plant, in effect, male and female plants
SUPERIOR OVARY most of the flower is attached below the ovary, formula: G …
–––

INFERIOR OVARY most of the flower is attached on the top of ovary, formula: G …
¯
¯¯¯¯
¯

(Inferior ovary only corresponds with monomeric or syncarpous flowers.)


WHORL flower parts attached to one node

Major Families
This section will cover some of the largest families of angiosperms, including their floral formula and general characteristics.

Orchidaceae, the Orchid Family


Orchids are one of the most species-rich group of plants, containing over 28,000 species (Figure 2.7.4.1). These plants tend to be
tropical and epiphytic (growing on other plants). However, as can be assumed from their vast diversity, orchids can be found in
many ecosystems and growing on a variety of substrates, including rocks! Their flowers are often highly modified, including long
nectar spurs, hairy petals, and strange morphologies. Many orchids are fly pollinated. Follow this link to see observations of
orchids from across the globe and in your region!

Figure 2.7.4.1 : Floral formula of the Orchidaceae. Flowers are bilaterally symmetrical. These flowers have tepals, so the K and C
have been replaced by a T. There are 5 tepals that are similar in appearance and one that is different. The androecium contains one
or two stamens that are fused to the gynoecium, which contains three fused carpels. Diagram by Melissa Ha, CC-BY-NC.

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Figure 2.7.4.2 : A diagram of general orchid flower structure, with a close up on the column. The column is a structure formed from
the fusion of the androecium and gynoecium. This flower has two lateral sepals emerging from the sides and one vertically oriented
dorsal sepal. There are two petals vertically oriented on either side of a the central column. In front of the column, a forward-
extending petal is labeled as the labellum (or lip). A nectar spur (a tubular structure formed from the perianth) extends below the
flower. Within the column, anthers flank a central stigma. Diagram by Maria Morrow, CC-BY-NC.

Figure 2.7.4.3 : Orchids produce a spectacular diversity of floral morphologies. The first image is Anoectochilus albolineatus, an
orchid whose labellum forms tendrils like spider legs. The second image is Caleana major, also called the large flying duck orchid
for its uncanny similarity to a cartoon duck. First image by Safwanah Safwan, CC-BY-NC. Second image by Ambikab, CC-BY-
NC.
Orchids make a large number of tiny seeds, i.e. the tiny black specks in vanilla bean ice cream are the seeds of the orchid Vanilla
plantifolia. An interesting, r-selected strategy with a twist: the seeds parasitize mycorrhizal fungi. Orchid seeds will not germinate
if they do not have a fungal partner. As the fungal hyphae penetrate into the orchid cells, they formed coiled structures. The orchid
feeds on the fungal hyphae until it has produced its first leaves and can photosynthesize on its own. At this point, the relationship
can be shifted toward mutualism, with sugars transfered from plant to fungus. However, some orchids have lost the ability to make

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chlorophyll and instead, continue to feed from their fungal partner. These plants are referred to as mycoheterotrophs. The
mycoheterotrophic orchid Rhizanthella gardneri undergoes its entire life cycle underground!

Asteraceae, the Aster Family or Composite Family


There are more than 32,000 accepted species in Asteraceae—a recent and dramatic increase in described species has sent them
soaring past the orchids (for the time being). They have a cosmopolitan distribution, but are better represented in temperate and
subtropical regions. This family is primarily herbaceous but does contain some woody species. Members of this family produce
head inflorescences with one or two different types of florets that all attach to a common receptacle (Figure 2.7.4.4). Disc florets
have radial symmetry, while ligulate florets have bilateral symmetry (Figure 2.7.4.5). Some inflorescences contain only disc florets
(e.g. thistle), some only ligulate florets (e.g. dandelions), and others contain a combination of the two (e.g. daisy). The
inflorescence is subtended by layers of bracts called phyllaries, forming an involucre.

Figure 2.7.4.4 : Floral formula of the Asteraceae. Disc florets are radially symmetrical, while ray florets are bilaterally symmetrical.
There are many unfused sepals. There are 5 fused petals. The androecium contains 5 fused stamens that are also fused to the petals.
The gynoecium contains 2 fused carpels. Diagram by Melissa Ha, CC-BY-NC.

Figure 2.7.4.5 : A long section through a head inflorescence and and one ligulate (ray) floret. The cone (center) of the head
inflorescence is composed of radially symmetrical disc florets that have fused yellow petals. These are encircled by a ring of ray
florets with white, fused petals and bilateral symmetry. All florets are attached to an enlarged receptacle area. A single ray floret is
shown on the right. This one has 5 fused yellow petals. The calyx is reduced to a ring of fuzz called a pappus. The stigma is two-
lobed.
The calyx is reduced to hairs or bristles (pappus, see Figure 2.7.4.6 − 7), petals are fused into a tube or ligula (with 5 or 3 teeth).
The pollen is lifted up and distributed by the outer sides of the stigmas, called secondary pollen presentation (Figure 2.7.4.6).
Florets have inferior ovaries. The fruit is an achene and the mature seed has almost no endosperm.

Figure 2.7.4.6 : Disc florets showing secondary pollen presentation by the stigmas, with anthers forming a tight ring around the
styles. The modified calyx (pappus) is shown at the base of the florets. Ligulate florets are shown on each side; these lack anthers.
All florets are attached to a common, swollen receptacle which is lined with bracts, forming an involucre.

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Figure 2.7.4.7 : Pappus of Cirsium vulgare florets. These bull thistle florets have shed their corollas, revealing the modified, bristle-
like calyx, the pappus. Photo by Tatyana Zarubo, CC-BY-NC.
Many plants withing the Asteraceae are used for oils, vegetables, ornamentals and medicinal plants are distributed in multiple
subfamilies. The most commercially important of these are:
Carduoideae: mostly tubular flowers
-Centaurea—knapweed
-Cynara—artichoke
-Carthamus–safflower
Cichorioideae: mostly 5-toothed ligulate (pseudo-ligulate) flowers + lacticifers with latex
-Taraxacum—dandelion
-Lactuca—lettuce
Asteroideae: tubular + 3-toothed ligulate flowers
-Helianthus—sunflower (BTW, “canola”, or Brassica napus from Cruciferae is the second main source of vegetable oil)
-Artemisia—sagebrush
-Tagetes—marigold and lots of other ornamentals

Fabaceae, the Legume Family


With around 19,000 species, Fabaceae (Figure 2.7.4.8) is the third largest angiosperm family after orchids and asters. This family
is widely distributed throughout the world, but does particularly well in the tropics. These plants form root nodules with nitrogen-
fixing bacteria. Leaves are alternate, pinnately compound (once or twice), with stipules. Plants in this family have legumes as fruits
(one locule dehiscent along a single suture).

Figure 2.7.4.8 : Floral formula of the Fabaceae. Because of the differences between the three subfamilies, a single floral formula
becomes complex. Most flowers are bilaterally symmetrical, though they are radially symmetrical in Mimosoideae. There are 5
sepals and 5 petals with varying degrees of fuision. In most cases, there are 10 stamens, but Mimosoideae has many. There is a
single carpel with an inferior ovary. Diagram by Melissa Ha, CC-BY-NC.
There are three subfamilies (Caesalpinioideae, Mimosoideae, Papilionoideae) with distinct characteristics. In Papilionoideae the
petals are mostly free, unequal and have special names: banner, keel and wing (Figure 2.7.4.9). In Mimosoideae, they fuse and
form a tube with radial symmetry. There are usually 10 stamens with 9 fused and one free; in Mimosoideae, stamens are numerous.
There is a single carpel in the gynoecium, meaning the ovary will have a single locule.

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Figure 2.7.4.9 : Flowers of Papilionoideae subfamily. The large, upright petal in the back is the banner. Two wings extend out to the
sides. A keel, composed of two fused petals, houses the reproductive whorls. The floral diagram shows that there are 9+1 stamens
(one of the stamens is separate from the others.

Some representatives of Fabaceae include:


Mimosoideae: stamens numerous, petals connected
-Acacia—dominant tree of African and Australian savannas, often with phyllodes
-Mimosa—sensitive plant
Papilionoideae: stamens 9+1, petals mostly free; this subfamily contains many extremely important food plants with high
protein value
-Glycine—soybean
-Arachis—peanut with self-buried fruits
-Phaseolus—bean
-Pisum—pea

Poaceae, the Grass Family


Grasses are monocots. There are approximately 12,000 species of grasses widely distributed throughout the world, but most genera
concentrate in the tropics. Grasses tend to be wind dispersed and prefer dry, sunny places. They often form turf (tussocks)—
compact structures where old grass stems, rhizomes, roots, and soil parts are intermixed. Grasses form grasslands—specific
ecological communities widely represented on Earth (for example, North American prairies are grasslands). Grasses are also
important components of other ecosystems (e.g. wetlands). Stems of grasses are usually hollow and round. The leaves have
sheathing bases.
Grass florets are reduced, wind-pollinated, usually bisexual (Figure 2.7.4.10), and form complicated spikelets. Each spikelet bears
two glumes; each flower has lemma and palea scales (Figure 2.7.4.11). The perianth is reduced to lodicules. Stamens from 6 to 1
(most often 3), with large anthers. The fruit of grasses is a caryopsis, what we commonly refer to as a grain. Grasses are incredibly
important commercially as food sources, construction, biofuels, and components of many products: rice, corn, wheat, sugarcane,
barley, rye, sorghum, and bamboo are all grasses. The study of grasses is called agrostology--it can be both aggravating and
glumey.

Figure 2.7.4.10 : Floral formula of the Poaceae. Grass florets are strange, indeed! They have a reduced perianth with two lodicules
(T) due to their wind pollination syndrome. The androecium usually contains 3 stamens, but there may be 1 or 6. The gynoecium
contains 2-3 fused carpels. Diagram by Melissa Ha, CC-BY-NC.

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Figure 2.7.4.11 : Floral structures in the Poaceae. On the left is a grass plant with sheathing leaves around a single stem topped by
an inflorescence composed of florets. In the center is a diagram of a spikelet. Each spikelet is composed of a central rachilla, two
glumes on the outside that enclose a lemma and an awn, and two florets composed of lodicules, palea, stamens, and carpels. On the
right is a flower diagram of a grass floret. The diagram shows a circle for the rachilla next to two palea. On the other side, the floret
is enclosed by an awn or lemma. In the center, there are two lodicules, three anthers, and a single carpel with two feathery stigmas
(each shown as asterix).

Attribution
Curated and authored by Maria Morrow using the following sources:
19.1.5 Diversity and Evolutionary Relationships of the Plants from Biology by John. W. Kimball (licensed CC-BY)
8.3 Three plant families you wanted to know but were too afraid to ask from Introduction to Botany by Alexey Shipunov
(public domain)
Angiosperm Families presentation by Melissa Ha, (CC BY-NC)

This page titled 2.7.4: Angiosperm Families is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Melissa Ha,
Maria Morrow, & Kammy Algiers (ASCCC Open Educational Resources Initiative) .
Current page by Melissa Ha, Maria Morrow, & Kammy Algiers is licensed CC BY-NC 4.0.
2.6.3.1: Flowers by Melissa Ha, Maria Morrow, & Kammy Algiers is licensed CC BY-NC 4.0.

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