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Objednávka rastlín Piperales
Objednávka rastlín Piperales
Anonim

Piperales, rad kvitnúcich rastlín zahŕňajúcich 3 čeľade, 17 rodov a 4 170 druhov. Spolu s príkazmi Laurales, Magnoliales a Canellales, Piperales tvorí magnoliidovú kladu, ktorá je rannou evolučnou vetvou v strome angiospermu; jaskyňa zodpovedá časti podtriedy Magnoliidae podľa starého kronquistického botanického klasifikačného systému.

Mnoho druhov Piperales sa pestuje ako okrasné rastliny, vrátane jašteriarskeho chvosta (Saururus cernuus); Druh Peperomia; Anemopsis z juhozápadnej Severnej Ameriky; Houttuynia, pôdny pokryv z Ázie; divý zázvor (Asarum); a viničové druhy Aristolochia, niektoré známe ako Dutchmanova fajka. Piper nigrum je hlavným zdrojom koreneného korenia známeho ako čierne korenie (ale aj zelené alebo biele korenie).

Spoločné charakteristiky

Členovia rádu Piperales majú často niekoľko funkcií, ktoré sa vyskytujú aj v jednoklíčnych rastlinách, vrátane diskrétnych cievnych zväzkov v stonke a trojnásobných častí kvetov. Aj keď existujú drevité členy, tento poriadok je charakteristicky bylinný a má často opuchnuté listové uzly. Reprodukcia semenami je hlavnou metódou rozširovania druhov v Piperales, ale fragmentácia odnoží v rodine jašteríc-chvostov zabezpečuje vegetatívne rozmnožovanie. Púpava je prevládajúcim ovocným druhom v Piperaceae alebo v skupine paprík, zatiaľ čo suché plody charakterizujú ďalšie štyri rodiny.

rodiny

Saururaceae, jašterica z chvosta, je pôvodom zo Severnej Ameriky a juhovýchodnej Ázie. Zahŕňa päť rodov a šesť druhov, väčšinou aromatické byliny s plazivými oddenkami (vodorovné stonky). Rastliny obyčajne obývajú mokré oblasti.

The largest family in Piperales is Piperaceae, which is pantropical and includes 5 genera and some 3,600 species, most of them in the large genera Peperomia and Piper (the black pepper genus). Saururaceae and Piperaceae are closely related. Their inflorescences (flower clusters) are slender, spikelike, and covered with inconspicuous closely appressed flowers. Even though individual flowers are small, the floral spikes are showy, and in several Saururaceae species the spikes resemble a single flower because of the expanded bracts that arise below the inflorescence. In Saururus the elongate cluster bends at its tip to suggest the fanciful appellation “lizard’s tail.” Other features common to most species of these two families include a sheathing leaf base, a lack of sepals and petals, bisexual flowers (stamens and carpels in the same flower), and the presence of one erect ovule per ovary chamber.

Aristolochiaceae, the birthwort family, includes about 590 species of woody vines, shrubs, and herbaceous species. Most species are distributed in the tropics of both hemispheres, though several genera are in the temperate zone. Compared with the flowers of other Piperales families, those of Aristolochiaceae are usually large, and some trap pollinating flies that are lured by unpleasant smells. Asarum and Saruma are herbaceous genera of the north temperate zone, most diverse in eastern Asia. Aristolochia includes more than 400 species of vines and herbs, many of them tropical. It is this group that is sometimes divided into two or four separate genera.

Lactoris fernandeziana, the only species in Lactoris (formerly of the family Lactoridaceae), is found on one island of the Juan Fernández Archipelago, off the coast of Chile. The leaves have a sheathing base, and the flowers occur singly or in small clusters along the stem. The flower stalks, or petioles, appear to arise from a sheathing leaf base that lacks a leaf blade. Lactoris pollen has been recovered in southern Africa from sediments dating back to the Late Cretaceous Epoch (100.5 million to 66 million years ago).

The former family Hydnoraceae is now a small subfamily of Aristolochiaceae, with seven species in two genera. They are terrestrial parasitic plants that lack leaves and chlorophyll. The large flowers have a single three-parted perianth whorl and an inferior ovary; they are foul-smelling and are pollinated by flies and beetles. Prosopanche occurs in Central and South America, and Hydnora occurs in Africa, Madagascar, and the Arabian Peninsula. The southern African Hydnora triceps grows exclusively on succulent species of Euphorbia.