Unit 4: Study of Angiospermic Families
Dicotyledonae Families
This section covers the vegetative and floral characteristics of representative Dicotyledonous families.
1. Ranunculaceae (Buttercup Family)
- Characters: Mostly annual or perennial herbs with acrid juice. Flowers are usually bisexual, actinomorphic, and often have numerous stamens and carpels arranged spirally.
2. Magnoliaceae (Magnolia Family)
- Characters: Trees or shrubs with large, showy, solitary flowers. Stamens and carpels are numerous and spirally arranged on a cone-like receptacle.
3. Brassicaceae (Mustard Family)
- Characters: Herbs with watery pungent juice. Flowers are cruciform (cross-shaped) with four petals. Fruit is a siliqua or silicula.
4. Malvaceae (Mallow Family)
- Characters: Herbs, shrubs, or trees often with mucilaginous sap. Flowers have monadelphous stamens forming a staminal tube around the style.
5. Fabaceae (Pea Family)
- Characters: Herbs, shrubs, or trees with root nodules. Flowers are zygomorphic with a papilionaceous corolla (standard, wings, and keel). Fruit is a legume.
6. Asteraceae (Sunflower Family)
- Characters: Inflorescence is a characteristic head or capitulum. Flowers (florets) are often of two types: ray and disc florets. Calyx is modified into a pappus.
7. Solanaceae (Potato Family)
- Characters: Mostly herbs or shrubs with alternate leaves. Flowers are actinomorphic with 5 fused petals and epipetalous stamens. Ovary is obliquely placed.
8. Lamiaceae (Mint Family)
- Characters: Aromatic herbs with quadrangular (square) stems. Leaves are opposite decussate. Inflorescence is often a verticillaster.
Monocotyledonae Families
This section covers representative families from the Monocotyledonae.
1. Orchidaceae (Orchid Family)
- Characters: Epiphytic or terrestrial herbs with highly specialized flowers. Flowers are zygomorphic with a distinctive labellum. Stamens and style are fused into a column. Pollen is often in masses called pollinia.
2. Musaceae (Banana Family)
- Characters: Large perennial herbs with a pseudostem formed by leaf sheaths. Inflorescence is a spadix with large, colorful bracts called spathes.
3. Poaceae (Grass Family)
- Characters: Annual or perennial grasses with cylindrical, hollow stems (culms). Leaves have a ligule at the junction of the blade and sheath. Inflorescence is a spikelet. Fruit is a caryopsis.
Exam Tips
- Asteraceae: Always mention the "Capitulum" inflorescence and "Pappus" calyx.
- Lamiaceae: Note the "Quadrangular stem" and "Verticillaster" inflorescence.
- Poaceae: Focus on the structure of the "Spikelet" and the "Caryopsis" fruit.
- Orchidaceae: Key terms are "Labellum", "Column", and "Pollinia".
Common Pitfalls
- Confusing the Verticillaster (Lamiaceae) with other types of cymose inflorescences.
- Forgetting the **oblique ovary** position when describing Solanaceae.
- Misidentifying the **pseudostem** of Musaceae as a true woody stem.