Title: Rosids I
1http//www.youtube.com/watch?vtrWzDlRvv1M But
first, a review Nepenthes, a pitcher plant in
the Caryophillid group
2Rosids I
- Crassulaceae
- Grossulariaceae
- Onagraceae
- Euphorbiaceae
3Rosids in general
- Somewhat weakly supported
- Hypanthium in a lot of groups
- 18 orders
- 114 families
- 58,000 species
- Over 1/3 of all dicots
- Mostly apopetalous separate petals
- Diverse group
- Two major clades
4Rosids I
- Very popular group in CO
- Economically important, many fruits
- We will study 14 families in this group
- Today, only four
- Crassulaceae
- Grossulariaceae
- Onagraceae
- Euphorbiaceae
5Crassulaceae
- Stone crop family
- Most are SMALL SUCCULENTS
- Regular, bisexual flowers
- 1 or 2 times as many stamen as pistils
- 3 or more simple pistils
- 4 or 5 sepals
- Sedum is a common species in Colorado
- Family where Crassulacean Acid Metabolism was
first described - http//www.crassulaceae.com/
6CAM
- Special metabolic pathway that helps plants live
in hot, arid habitats - Stomata open during the night to let in CO2
- The CO2 is fixed into an acid
- That acid then releases C into the Krebs cycle
during the day when light is present - Stomata are closed during the day
7CAM at night
8CAM during the day
9Sedum lanceolatum - Stonecrop
10Clementsia rhodantha Queens Crown
11Sedum rosea or Rhodiola integrifolia Kings
crown
12Grossulariaceae
- Gooseberry family
- Includes currants
- Mostly shrubs with palmate leaves
- Shiny berries with attached sepals
- Regular bisexual flowers, but small (1/4 in)
- Five united sepals
- Five separate petals
- Five stamen
- Inferior or superior ovary
- Only ONE genus!!! Ribes arguably Grossularia
- Ecologically important
13Ribes cereum wax currant
14Ribes cereum in fruit
15Ribes lacustre Prickly currant
16Onagraceae
- Evening primrose family
- FOUR-LOBED STIGMA
- Four petals
- Four sepals
- Four (or 8) stamen
- FOUR syncarpous (fused) carpels
- INFERIOR OVARY
- Capsule, berry, or drupe
- Called evening primrose because they generally
open in the evening / late afternoon
17Onagraceae
18Onagraceae distribution
19Onagraceae Four lobed stigma
20Onagraceae Note the hypanthium
21Onagraceae in cross-section
22Oenothera caespitosa
23Oenothera caespitosa
24Onagraceae
- Fireweed (Chamerion angustifolium)
- Abundant after fires
- Adapted to fire via underground rhizomes that
sprout up after fire - Lightweight seeds and many of them
- After a certain time, other species come up and
outcompete it via light interception - Worldwide
- Low resistance to human trampeling
25Chamerion angustifolium
26Chamerion angustifolium
27Euphorbiaceae
- Euphorb family
- Spurge family
- MILKY SAP
- Many are succulent
- Can lack sepals
- Can lack petals
- Carpels 1-20
- Superior ovary
- Fruit is a schizocarpic capsule
28Euphorbiaceae
- Convergent evolution
- Many euphorbs occupy the same niches in Africa
that many of our cacti do - Euphorbia is the only genus of plants known to
have all three metabolic pathways C3, C4, and
CAM
29Euphorbiaceae
30Euphorbiaceae - Distribution
31Euphorbiaceae - Succulent
32Euphorbiaceae milky sap
33Euphorbiaceae - flowers
34Euphorbiaceae - Cyanthium
35Poinsettia
36Cassava or manioc is in this family
37Roots of Manihot esculentahttp//www.youtube.com/
watch?vQtvhs0O2oJE