Species
Magnoliophyta
IUCN
NCBI
EOL Text
Despite their diversity, angiosperms are clearly united by a suite of synapomorphies (i.e., shared, derived features) including 1) ovules that are enclosed within a carpel, that is, a structure that is made up of an ovary, which encloses the ovules, and the stigma, a structure where pollen germination takes place, 2) double fertilization, which leads to the formation of an endosperm (a nutritive tissue within the seed that feeds the developing plant embryo), 3) stamens with two pairs of pollen sacs, 4) features of gametophyte structure and development, and 5) phloem tissue composed of sieve tubes and companion cells (see Doyle and Donoghue, 1986; Judd et al. 2002; P. Soltis et al., 2004; and D. Soltis et al., 2005, for further discussion). All available evidence strongly rejects hypotheses of more than one evolutionary origin of extant angiosperms.
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Rights holder/Author | Pam Soltis, Doug Soltis, Christine Edwards, Tree of Life web project |
Source | http://tolweb.org/Angiosperms/20646 |
World Wide Flowering Plant Family Identification - worldwide
Wildflowers
Flickr: Wildflower Field Guide, North America - Identify your Wildflowers here - North America ( I )
Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center Plants Database - North America
Gallery of Connecticut Wildflowers - Connecticut, USA
MyWildflowers Database - Western Pennsylvania, USA
Fred's Flower Finder - Southwest Kansas, USA
Flickr: Guide to California Wildflowers - California, USA ( I )
Wildflowers of Tucson, Arizona - Arizona, USA
Ontario Wildflowers - Ontario, Canada
Botanical Society of the British Isles: Find Wild Flowers - UK
License | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ |
Rights holder/Author | Tracy Barbaro, Tracy Barbaro |
Source | http://eol.org/collections/108 |
angiosperms (flowering plants) is prey of:
Lepidoptera
Aves
Anura
Lepidosauria
Lerwa lerwa
Sciurognathi
Ochotona ladacensis
Pseudois nahura
Bos grunniens
Bombini
Aphididae
Curculionidae
Based on studies in:
Russia (Agricultural)
Tibet (Montane)
This list may not be complete but is based on published studies.
- N. N. Smirnov, Food cycles in sphagnous bogs, Hydrobiologia 17:175-182, from p. 179 (1961).
- L. W. Swan, The ecology of the high Himalayas, Sci. Am. 205:68-78, from pp. 76-77 (October 1961).
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Rights holder/Author | Cynthia Sims Parr, Joel Sachs, SPIRE |
Source | http://spire.umbc.edu/fwc/ |
Relationships after Qiu et al. (1999, 2000), P. Soltis et al. (1999), D. E. Soltis et al. (2000), Zanis et al. (2002) and Hilu et al. (2003).
Amborella and the root of the angiosperm evolutionary tree
Most analyses of the past five years concur in placing the monotypic Amborella as the sister to all other extant angiosperms, although some analyses suggest Amborella plus water lilies may occupy this pivotal position (see below). Amborella trichopoda, endemic to cloud forests of New Caledonia, was described in the mid-nineteenth century (Baillon, 1869) and has since been classified with various groups of basal angiosperms, most often with Laurales (e.g., Cronquist, 1981), a group of magnoliids (see below). However, Amborella lacks those features considered to be synapomorphies for Laurales (Doyle and Endress, 2000; see Laurales later) and clearly differs from most Laurales in having spirally arranged floral organs (except perhaps the carpels; M. Buzgo et al., University of Florida, unpublished data), rather than the whorled arrangement typical of most Laurales (see studies of floral morphology and development by Endress and Igersheim, 2000a; Posluszny and Tomlinson, 2003; Buzgo et al., 2004). Amborella has carpels that are closed only by secretion, rather than by fused tissue as in most angiosperms (Endress and Igersheim, 2000b)–a feature that may represent a plesiomorphy (i.e., ancestral feature) for the angiosperms. Features that unify all extant angiosperms except Amborella include vessels (Judd et al., 2002; but see Feild et al., 2000; Doyle and Endress, 2001) and pollen grains with a reticulate tectum (Doyle and Endress, 2001). Synapomorphies for all extant angiosperms except Amborella and Nymphaeaceae (sensu APG II, 2003) include ethereal oil cells–common throughout basal angiosperms–and columellate pollen grains with a perforate tectum (Doyle and Endress, 2001).
Photo of Amborella trichopoda (Amborellaceae; photo © Sangtae Kim).
The placement of Amborella as sister to all other angiosperms is supported by nearly all multigene analyses of basal angiosperms, including evidence from all three plant genomes (e.g., P. Soltis et al., 1999; Qiu et al., 1999; Mathews and Donoghue, 1999, 2000; Parkinson et al., 1999; Graham and Olmstead, 2000; Graham et al., 2000; D. Soltis et al., 2000; Magallon and Sanderson, 2002; Zanis et al., 2002; see also Nickerson and Drouin, 2004). A few studies have found alternative rootings, using either different genes or different methods of analysis. For example, Amborella + Nymphaeaceae (e.g. Barkman et al., 2000; P. Soltis et al., 2000; Kim et al., 2004a) or Nymphaeaceae alone (e.g., Parkinson et al., 1999; Graham and Olmstead, 2000, with partial sampling of Nymphaeaceae; Mathews and Donoghue, 2000) have occasionally been reported as sister to all other angiosperms. However, statistical analyses of these alternative rootings using a data set of up to 11 genes generally favor the tree with Amborella as sister to the rest, although the Amborella + Nymphaeaceae tree could not always be rejected (Zanis et al., 2002).
Another alternative, which conflicts with all molecular analyses of angiosperms with dense taxon sampling, is based on a selection of 61 genes from the totally sequenced plastid genomes of 13 plant species (Goremykin et al., 2003). This data set placed the monocots (represented by only three grasses–rice, maize, and wheat) as the sister to all other extant angiosperms, while Amborella was sister to Calycanthus of Laurales, a position consistent with the original description of Amborella, but clearly at odds with other aspects of morphology (see Laurales section). Goremykin et al. (2003) attributed their results to the increased character sampling (30,017 nucleotides in their aligned matrix) in their study relative to other analyses that included fewer genes but many more taxa. However, further analyses of a data set of three genes and nearly equivalent taxon sampling as used by Goremykin et al. indicated that the "monocots-basal" topology is an artifact of limited taxon sampling (D. Soltis and Soltis, 2004; Soltis et al., 2004). The recent work of Stefanovic et al. (2005) further indicates that the results of Goremykin et al. reflect poor taxon sampling. Stefanovic et al. added the nearly complete plastid sequence of Acorus to the Goremykin et al. data set, and this simple addition resulted in the "Amborella-basal" topology.
The basal angiosperms
The basal angiosperms represent a grade that includes the following groups: Amborellaceae (discussed above), Nymphaeaceae (sensu APG II, 2003), Austrobaileyales, Ceratophyllaceae, Chloranthaceae, magnoliids, and monocots (although not all investigators choose to consider monocots basal angiosperms). The evolutionary relationships of these groups are discussed below.
Photos of Nuphar japonica sp. (Nymphaeaceae; photo © Sangtae Kim), Austrobaileya sp. (Austrobaileyales; photo © Peter Endress) and Illicium floridanum (Schisandraceae sensu APG II (2003); photo © Doug Soltis).
Nymphaeaceae. The phylogenetic position of Nymphaeaceae as one of the two basalmost (or oldest diverging) lineages of extant angiosperms is strongly supported by nearly all molecular analyses. This clade of eight aquatic genera has a worldwide distribution, consistent with the ancient age of this lineage based on the fossil record. However, despite the ancient origins of this group, molecular analyses indicate that most extant genera of Nympheaceae have relatively recent origins (Yoo et al. 2005).
Austrobaileyales. The positions of Amborellaceae and Nymphaeaceae as successive sisters to the rest of the angiosperms are followed, in turn, by Austrobaileyales. Austrobaileyales are a small clade that comprises Austrobaileyaceae (Austrobaileya) and Trimeniaceae (Trimenia) from Australasia plus a broadly defined Schisandraceae (sensu APG II, 2003, i.e., Schisandra, Kadsura, and Illicium; Qiu et al., 1999; Renner, 1999; Savolainen et al., 2000a, b; P. Soltis et al., 1999; D. Soltis et al., 2000). Although the traditional Illiciaceae and Schisandraceae have typically been considered to be closely related, a relationship between these taxa and Austrobaileya and Trimenia had not been suspected. No morphological characteristics have been identified that unify this group, despite the strong molecular support for its monophyly.
Relationships among Ceratophyllaceae, monocots, Chloranthaceae, magnoliids, and eudicots
Resolution and support for relationships among Ceratophyllaceae, monocots, Chloranthaceae, magnoliids, and eudicots are poor. Individually, each lineage is well supported, and both the fossil record and molecular-based trees identify these lineages as ancient. However, relationships among them remain unclear. It is clear, however, that angiosperms do not fall into two major groups that correspond to monocots (Liliopsida) and dicots (Magnoliopsida) of most traditional classification systems such as Cronquist (1981), Takhtajan (1997), and their predecessors. Although monocots clearly form a strongly supported group, dicots in the traditional sense do not: most are found in the eudicot clade, but the remaining nonmonocot basal branches (i.e., Amborellaceae, Nymphaeaceae, Austrobaileyales, Ceratophyllaceae, Chloranthaceae, magnoliids) were also "traditional" dicots. It was long suspected that the "dicots" as traditionally recognized represents multiple evolutionary lineages, and the nonmonophyly of dicots based on molecular data precludes their recognition in current classifications (e.g., APG II, 2003). Thus, the concept of "dicot" should be abandoned in favor of eudicots.
Photos of Ceratophyllum demersum (Ceratophyllaceae; photo © Peter Endress), Sarcandra chloranthoides (Chloranthaceae; photo © Peter Endress) and Magnolia grandiflora (Magnoliaceae; photo © Sangtae Kim)
Monocots. While dicots are not a valid group, the monocots indeed are a distinct group within the angiosperms. Ray (1703) first identified the monocots as a group, based largely on their possession of a single cotyledon. Nonmolecular phylogenetic studies of monocots (Doyle and Donoghue, 1992; Donoghue and Doyle, 1989; Loconte and Stevenson, 1991) support this grouping; these studies have identified 13 putative synapomorphies for the monocots, including, among others, a single cotyledon, parallel-veined leaves, sieve cell plastids with several cuneate protein crystals, scattered vascular bundles in the stem, and an adventitious root system. An often-overlooked synapomorphy for monocots is their sympodial growth; although there are other angiosperms with sympodial growth, monocots are nearly exclusively so. These synapomorphies are covered in detail by Chase (2004; see also Judd et al., 2002; D. Soltis et al., 2005). In some analyses the monocots appear as the sister to Ceratophyllaceae, with the clade of monocots + Ceratophyllaceae sister to Chloranthaceae + magnoliids + eudicots (e.g., Zanis et al., 2002; Davies et al., 2004). However, relationships of monocots are unclear and further work is needed to assess the validity of their relationships.
Ceratophyllaceae. Ceratophyllaceae (Ceratophyllum) had the distinction of appearing as the sister to all other angiosperms in the first large molecular phylogenetic analysis based on rbcL (Chase et al., 1993). The aquatic habit and simple flowers seemed at odds with most hypotheses about the earliest angiosperms, although Ceratophyllum has a long fossil record, going back at least 125 mya (Dilcher, 1989). Subsequent analyses demonstrated that this placement was unique to the rbcL data set. Our current understanding of the relationship of Ceratophyllum to other angiosperms, based on evidence from many other genes, is still not clear although it may be related to the monocots (see Monocots above).
Chloranthaceae. Chloranthaceae, with their small, simple flowers, have an extensive fossil record, dating back 125 my (e.g., Couper, 1958; Walker and Walker, 1984; Friis et al., 2000; Doyle et al., 2004; Eklund et al., 2004). However, although the origins of the family are ancient, most extant genera are relatively young in age (Zhang and Renner, 2003). Chloranthaceae are clearly an isolated lineage separate from the magnoliid clade (Fig. 2), but their phylogenetic position remains uncertain. In some analyses (e.g., Zanis et al., 2002; Davies et al., 2004), they are sister to a clade of magnoliids + eudicots, albeit with weak support.
Magnoliids. The magnoliid clade comprises most of those lineages typically referred to as "primitive angiosperms" in earlier works (e.g., Cronquist, 1981, 1988; Stebbins, 1974; Takhtajan, 1997). Although the component families of the magnoliid clade were loosely associated in previous classifications, for example, as Cronquist's (1981) subclass Magnoliidae, relationships among the families were not clear. In addition, Magnoliidae contained groups that are not part of the magnoliid clade as recognized by phylogenetic analyses. Reconstructing relationships within this clade is challenging, given the age of the group (some putative members, such as Archaeanthus, Dilcher and Crane, 1984, date to the early Cretaceous) and presumably high levels of extinction. Although the major lineages of the magnoliid clade were identified as well-supported clades in earlier studies (e.g., P. Soltis et al., 1999), composition and interrelationships of the magnoliid clade did not become clear until data sets of at least five genes for a broad sample of taxa were assembled to address these problems (e.g., Qiu et al., 1999, 2000; Zanis et al., 2002). Some phylogenetic analyses weakly support a grouping of magnoliids as sister to the eudicots, although more data are necessary to clarify this relationship.
Eudicots. Eudicots, a clade strongly supported by molecular data, comprise the bulk of angiosperm species (approximately 75%; Drinnan et al., 1994). This large clade is supported by a single morphological synapomorphy–triaperturate pollen. This pollen type is unique to the eudicots, and while not all eudicots have triaperturate pollen due to subsequent changes in pollen structure, triaperturate pollen is clearly distinct from the uniaperturate pollen of basal angiosperms, monocots, and all other seed plants, allowing easy assignment of fossil pollen to the eudicots. The fossil pollen record indicates that the eudicots appeared 125 mya, shortly after the origin of the angiosperms themselves. The extensive fossil pollen collections worldwide, coupled with solid dates, make it unlikely that the eudicots arose much before this time point.
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Rights holder/Author | Pam Soltis, Doug Soltis, Christine Edwards, Tree of Life web project |
Source | http://tolweb.org/Angiosperms/20646 |
Stigmas ensure pollination: angiosperms
The stigmas of flowering plants selectively recognize pollen from the same species in part through biochemical interactions.
"A stigma will not react to pollen from another species. Since the physical shape of the pollen grains is so distinctive, it is tempting to think that the recognition between the two is a geometric one analogous to the way that a lock can recognise a key that belongs to it. This may in fact be the case, though if so it is only part of the mechanism of recognition. Other biochemical stimulations and responses also play a crucial part." (Attenborough 1995:96)
Learn more about this functional adaptation.
- Attenborough, D. 1995. The Private Life of Plants: A Natural History of Plant Behavior. London: BBC Books. 320 p.
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Rights holder/Author | (c) 2008-2009 The Biomimicry Institute |
Source | http://www.asknature.org/strategy/82aeb806e92dcd62afabf5ff7e25ce96 |
Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLD) Stats
Specimen Records:290032
Specimens with Sequences:348097
Specimens with Barcodes:232638
Species:85561
Species With Barcodes:81751
Public Records:213930
Public Species:69664
Public BINs:0
Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLD) Stats
Specimen Records:5
Specimens with Sequences:5
Specimens with Barcodes:5
Species:1
Species With Barcodes:1
Public Records:5
Public Species:1
Public BINs:0
Magnoliophyta, the flowering plants (angiosperms), also known as Angiospermae, are the most diverse group of land plants, with an estimated 250,000 to 400,000 species, belonging to around 415 families. They comprise the dominant form of terrestrial vegetation. Angiosperms are seed-producing plants that can be distinguished from gymnosperms by various synapomorphies (derived characteristics), including flowers, endosperm within the seeds, and production of fruits that contain the seeds (for additional details, cf. Takhtajan 2009).
Ancestors of flowering plants diverged from gymnosperms around 245–202 million years ago; the first flowering plants known to exist are from 140 million years ago. They diversified enormously during the Lower Cretaceous and became widespread around 100 million years ago. They replaced conifers as the dominant plants by 60 million years ago.
Traditionally, angiosperms are divided into two groups, which in the Cronquist system are the classes Magnoliopsida (or Magnoliatae) and Liliopsida (or Liliatae). The English term dicotyledon(s) (abbreviated dicot[s]) is frequently used to refer to Magnoliopsida, while monocotyledon(s) (abbreviated monocots), refers to Liliopsida. These names derive from the observation that the dicots most often have two cotyledons, or embryonic leaves, within each seed, whereas monocots usually have only one. However, the rule is not absolute either way, so the terms dicot and monocot do not correspond perfectly with the family classifications.
Dicot species comprise the majority: roughly 75% of angiosperm species are eudicots, the group of dicots that belong to a monophyletic clade, that is, a group that includes all descendants of a common ancestor. Dicots are more diverse in habitat, and over half are woody plants, including many tree species, which have branched trunks. The monocots are generally herbaceous—fewer than 10% are woody--and almost all of these are in Arecaceae, the palm family, are characterized by a single unbranched trunk topped by a crown of large leaves.
The most diverse families of flowering plants in order of number of species, are the following: Asteraceae or Compositae (daisy); Orchidaceae (orchid); Fabaceae or Leguminosae (pea); Rubiaceae (madder); Poaceae or Graminae (grass); Lamiaceae or Labiatae (mint); Euphorbiaceae (spurge); Melastomataceae (melastome); Myrtaceae (myrtle); and Apocynaceae (dogbane). All are eudicots except Orchidaceae and Poaceae, which are monocots.
Agriculture depends almost entirely on angiosperms, either directly or indirectly through livestock feed. Of all plant families, Poaceae, the grass family, is most important, providing the bulk of all cereals and grains (rice, corn [maize], wheat, barley, rye, oats, millet, sugar cane, sorghum). Fabaceae (legumes), are second to Poaceae in providing human and livestock food. Also important are Solanaceae (nightshade family, including potatoes, tomatoes, and peppers); Cucurbitaceae (gourd family, including pumpkins, squashes, and melons); Brassicaceae (mustard family, including canola, cabbage, broccoli, and cauliflower); and Apiaceae (parsley family, including carrots). Many fruits come from Rosaceae (rose family, including apples, pears, cherries, apricots, plums) and Rutaceae (rue family, including oranges, lemons, and grapefruits).
Angiosperms also provide vital economic resources in the form of wood (although surpassed by gymnosperms in total timber production), paper, fiber (cotton, flax, and hemp, among others), sweeteners (sugar, maple syrup, agave), medicines (digitalis, camphor, and numerous others), decorative and landscaping plants.
(Cronquist 1988, Stevens/APG 2001, Takhtajan 2009, Wikipedia 2011)
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