Title: 'Geranium; flowers 5-merous, stamens with filaments unite
1Phylogenetic Classification System - Dicots
2Flowering plants
Nymphaeles
Magnoliids
Monocots
Tricolpates (Eudicots)
Basal Tricolpates
Core Tricolpates (Core Eudicots)
Rosids
Eurosids I
Eurosids II
Asterids
Euasterids I
Euasterids II
See http//www.colby.edu/info.tech/BI211/PhyloFa
milies.htm for more information
3Nymphaeales
Waterlilies Aquatic often contain latex leaves
mostly alternate, simple flowers solitary,
bisexual, actinomorphic
4Magnoliids
Magnolia trees and shrubs leaves alternate,
simple, stipulate, the stipules large and
enclosing the young buds, falling quickly and
leaving a scar at the node flowers perfect,
often large, with many separate sepals, petals
(often undifferentiated), stamens, and carpels.
5Eudicots Basal Tricolpates
columbine
buttercup
Buttercups mostly herbs leaves with sheathing
leaf bases, blades often divided flowers mostly
perfect with spirally arranged, numerous stamens
and carpels.
6Eudicots Basal Tricolpates
Poppy mostly herbs, sometimes shrubs or trees,
often with milky or colored latex leaves
alternate flowers showy, perfect, calyx of 2-3
distinct, quickly falling sepals, corolla of 4-6
or 8-12 biseriate, crumpled, separate petals
numerous stamens, 2- to several united carpels
fruit a capsule opening by valves or pores.
7Eudicots Core Tricolpates
Cactus succulent, fleshy habit, usually spiny
herbs, with the spines arranged in areoles
flowers solitary and showy with numerous perianth
parts stamens numerous ovary inferior.
8Eudicots Core Tricolpates
pink
carnation
Pink Herbs with swollen nodes leaves opposite,
connected at the base with a transverse line
pistil with free central placentation fruit a
many-seeded capsule opening by teeth or valves.
9Eudicots Rosids
geranium
Geranium flowers 5-merous, stamens with
filaments united at base fruit with elastic
dehiscent schizocarps that curl on the beak.
10Fruits (schizocarps) of filaree (Erodium
moschatum), a common and prolific naturalized
Mediterranean weed during the spring in southern
California. Each fruit is composed of five
sections called carpels and a long, slender style
column. Since the seed-bearing carpels do not
split open, the fruit is considered indehiscent.
When they begin to dry out, the mature carpels
(each with its own slender style) separate from
each other. As the styles uncoil, the carpels are
often forcibly ejected. Upon landing on the
ground, the free end of the style spirals around
like the hand of a clock, twisting the
seed-bearing carpel deeper and deeper into the
soil. Species of Erodium are also called
storksbill because of the long, beaklike style
column on the fruits. From http//waynesword.palo
mar.edu/fruitid2.htm
11Eudicots Eurosids I
Cucurbit, gourd coarse, tendril-bearing vines
flowers usually yellow, imperfect ovary
inferior fruit a berry or pepo.
12Eudicots Eurosids I
mimosa
Bean, pea trees, shrubs, or herbs leaves
pinnately or palmately compound or simple
flowers papilionaceous and distinctly irregular
corolla of 5 petals forming a banner (or
standard), 2 wings, and a keel stamens 10 ( all
free, 9 fused and 1 free, or all 10 fused)
pistil of 1 carpel fruit a legume.
13Eudicots Eurosids I
Female catkin
Male catkin
Birch, alder Deciduous trees or shrubs leaves
simple, serrate staminate flowers in catkins.
14Eudicots Eurosids I
Beech, oak trees or shrubs leaves alternate
(in oak, leaves and buds clustered at the ends of
the branches, pith 5-angled) fruit a nut, at
least partially covered by a cupule of hardened
bracts.
15Eudicots Eurosids I
Spurge herbs, shrubs, trees or lianas many are
xerophytic and cactoid most with milky latex
leaves alternate, sometimes opposite or whorled,
simple or compound, usually with stipules, but
often modified into glands, hairs, or spines
flowers imperfect, plants often monoecious
sepals and petals present or either or both
lacking fruit a schizocarp.
16Eudicots Eurosids I
violet
pansies
Herbs (tropical members are trees and shrubs)
flowers zygomorphic, 5-merous, petals 5, the
anterior ones spurred, stamens 5, frequently 1 is
spurred at the base.
17Eudicots Eurosids I
apples, pears, plums, peaches, strawberries, and
raspberries
Herbs, shrubs, and trees leaves with stipules
flowers actinomorphic sepals 5, petals 5
stamens numerous hypanthium (floral disk) often
present.
18Eudicots Eurosids I
Elm trees or shrubs with watery sap leaf bases
oblique fruit an evenly winged samara or
drupe.
19Eudicots Eurosids I
Walnut family trees, rarely shrubs, deciduous,
with gray or brownish bark leaves alternate or
opposite, aromatic, pinnately compound margins
serrate or entire flowers unisexual, staminate
and pistillate on same plants ovary 1, inferior
stigmas 2, fleshy or plumose fruits large nuts
or samaras
20Eudicots Eurosids II
- Brassicaceae (Cruciferae)
silique
Mustard herbs with an odorous, watery juice
flowers of 4 sepals, 4 petals, and 6 stamens (4
long and 2 short) fruit a silique or silicle.
21Eudicots Eurosids II
Maple trees or shrubs leaves opposite, usually
simple with palmate venation flowers
actinomorphic fruit a winged schizocarp.
22Asterids
Rhododendron indicum - Azalea
Heath, rhododendron woody, often shrubby
leaves alternate, evergreen or deciduous flowers
urceolate or campanulate stamens distinct, often
twice as many as the petals, anthers opening by
terminal pores.
23Also see http//theseedsite.co.uk/flowershapes
.html
24Asterids Euasterids I
Mint herbs and shrubs with square stems
aromatic leaves opposite inflorescences
axillary or whorled flowers 5-merous,
zygomorphic stamens 2 or 4 ovary deeply
4-lobed, style basally attached between the 4
lobes fruit of 4 nutlets.
25Asterids Euasterids I
Olive, ash leaves opposite flowers 4-merous,
stamens 2, ovary 2-locular seeds usually 2 per
locule.
26Asterids Euasterids I
Trumpet creepers shrubs, woody vines, trees
leaves opposite, often compound sepals 5
connate, stamens often 4 ovary superior.
27Asterids Euasterids I
foxglove
snapdragon
Figwort, snapdragon flowers 5-merous,
zygomorphic corolla 2-lipped stamens 2 or 4,
sometimes with a fifth sterile stamen ovary
2-locular, style terminal, ovules numerous.
28Asterids Euasterids I
nightshade
petunia
Nightshade, potato leaves alternate, stipules
absent flowers actinomorphic, 5-merous stamens
5 ovary 2-locular, sometimes falsely divided
again ovules numerous fruit a berry or
capsule.
29(No Transcript)
30Asterids Euasterids II
Carrot, parsley aromatic herbs with hollow
stems leaves compound with sheathing bases
inflorescences umbellate flowers 5-merous, often
yellow or white stamens 5, ovary 2-carpellate,
bilocular, inferior fruit a schizocarp.
31Asterids Euasterids II
Ray floret
Disk floret
Sunflower or Aster inflorescence of dense heads
surrounded by whorls of bracts (the involucre or
phyllaries) two floret types disk and ray
inferior ovary achenes
32From Phillips, R.B. 2004. Biology 211 Flowering
Plant TaxonomyGUIDE TO FLOWERING PLANT
RECOGNITION (Phylogenetic System of
Classification). Accessed 21 March 2005.
http//www.colby.edu/info.tech/BI211/PhyloFamilies
.htm.
33Catkins are found in a few different families.
Above are two members of the Moraceae (Mulberry)
family.
Notice the male catkin it is similar to those
that you will dissect today.
Here is the pistillate inflorescence that you
will be dissecting today.