Kingdom Plantae
Division Magnoliophyta

The angiosperms are the flowering plants. They are slowly replacing the gymnosperms. They exploded onto the scene around 100 million years ago, and were an unqualified success. There are over 250,000 species, and they have adapted to almost every habitat on earth.

Flowering plants reproduce sexually by means of flowers and seeds contained in fruit. They reproduce faster than gymnosperms, and have more efficient xylem vessels (containing cells called vessel elements).

Angiosperms are divided into two groups, the monocots and the dicots.

Monocots, sometimes called monocotyledons, have long tapering leaves with parallel veins, the flower petals come in multiples of three, have scattered vascular bundles, and the seeds have only one cotyledon.

Famous monocots include the lilies, orchids, irises, yams, asparagus, waterweeds, and a number of palm-like tropical trees.

Dicots, AKA the dicotyledons, have broad leaves with webed veins, the flower petals come in multiples of four or five, the vascular bundles are arranged in a circle, and the seeds have two cotyledons.

Well-known dicots include the sunflower, dandelion, forget-me-not, cabbage, melon, apple, orange, buttercup, maple, and macadamia nut.

The family tree of angiosperms underwent a revolution in the 2000s. A group of experts called the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group (APG) revised all the orders and families in the light of newly-available DNA evidence. In many cases they made major changes to the circumscriptions (what was covered by what), moved things around, cut things up, and made surprising connections. They also departed from Linnaean taxonomy by creating some major clades that didn't have specific ranks, but indicated important groupings. These they wrote in bold lower-case. The APG classification was followed several years later by revisions APG II and APG III, and we are now at APG IV.

Basic structure

First, the traditional primary distinction between monocotyledons and dicotyledons proved to be only half true. There is still a true clade, which they call monocots, covering grass and onions and daffodils and the like. Most of the old dicotyledons are assigned to a parallel group called eudicots. The rest are mostly in a third parallel group, magnoliids. Parallel here means we don't yet know how to resolve the trichotomy: one of the three groups branched first, but it is difficult to tell which. However, outside these main groups are three smaller orders, Austrobaileyales, Nympheales (the water lilies), and Amborellales, the last an entire order created for a single New Caledonian plant. This is seemingly the cousin of all the rest: the ancestral angiosperm divided into the ancestor of Amborella and the ancestor of all other angiosperms.

Inside monocots there is a major group called commelinids. Inside eudicots there is a major group core eudicots, which includes two groups asterids and rosids. At each level there may also be some orders (or families removed from former orders) that are part of the level but not part of any major group below. These are called basal. For example, basal eudicots include orders Ranunculales and Proteales and (in APG II) family Buxaceae not in any order; eudicots includes those as well as the larger clade core eudicots. (In APG III it was neatened up by giving Buxaceae its own order Buxales.) The final layer of these bold new clades is that each of asterids and rosids has two major subclades, and these are called euasterids I, euasterids II, eurosids I, and eurosids II.

On naming

Plant orders always end in -ales, and they contain families ending in -aceae. A family is named after one of its genera, and an order is named after one of its families. So the family containing grasses is named Poaceae after a particular grass genus Poa, and is accordingly referred to as the grass family. (This is just a convention: the 'rose' family contains blackberries and apples and almonds, and many others. They're all Rosaceae and all in the rose family but they're not considered roses, not even by theoretical biologists.) The order containing the grass, rush, and sedge families is called Poales. The order containing the rose, fig, and cannabis families is called Rosales. Eight traditional and very well-known family names not ending in -aceae have been preserved as alternatives; so Poaceae is also called Gramineae.

So the lower-case plural names of the new clades was a bold step. I am particularly impressed by the daring of those Roman numerals in the likes of euasterids I. (The bold face was how they were first presented: I don't know whether workers in the field really bother with it. The names are perfectly good and distinctive without it, and to save wear and tear on my HTML I'll drop it hereafter.) My only quibble is that the name order Asterales is in euasterids II, unexpectedly. Since these name were first given, slightly more conventional alternatives have been proposed, naming them after one of the groups inside them: so euasterids I, euasterids II, eurosids I, and eurosids II are also known respectively as lamiids, campanulids, fabids, and malvids.

Orders and families: and examples

On a good day I can place the 40-odd orders I've memorized, and several times that many families in them. There are more orders, and many more families, and serious sites elsewhere on the web list them all. I just want to give an overall view here, so I'm going to name only the orders and families that contain plants I've heard of. These orders cover the great bulk of the angiosperm world. Even these 40 can't be fitted neatly in a tree on one sheet of paper, and the list below is inevitably going to be messy too. The common names I mention below, such as magnolias, laurels, and peppers, are just typical members, not definitions, and sometimes they're products (such as camphor). If I don't mention a family, you can take it from the order: bay laurels are in order Laurales, so you can interpose the family Lauraceae by the standard naming rule. Note there are some common names that have multiple hugely different meanings (e.g. chestnut, hemlock, laurel, lime, loosestrife, pepper, plantain, sycamore, yam); I've added clarifications for these, if it's not obvious from the taxonomic location.

Amborellales: Amborella

Nymphaeales: water lilies

The magnoliids include:

The monocots include:

The eudicots include:

Now for some of the largest groups, which won't reasonably fit in the upper-level tables above.

euasterids I (lamiids):

euasterids II (campanulids):

eurosids I (fabids):

eurosids II (malvids):

  • Malvales
    • Malvaceae an astonishing diversity now brought into the one family: mallow, hibiscus, hollyhock; lime/linden; abutilon, balsa, baobab, cacao (chocolate), cotton, durian, kapok, kola, okra
    • Cistaceae: rock rose (Cistus)
    • Thymelaeaceae: daphne
  • Brassicales
    • Brassicaceae or Cruciferae: Brassica (cabbage, cauliflower, broccoli, Brussels sprout), mustard, cress, radish, horseradish, swede, turnip, wasabi; aubretia, candytuft, honesty, rapeseed/canola, thale cress (Arabidopsis thaliana), Virginian stock, wallflower, woad
    • Capparaceae: caper
    • Caricaceae: pawpaw/papaya
    • Tropaeolaceae: nasturtium
  • Sapindales
  • Myrtales This and Geraniales form a clear clade, the sister of the rest of eurosids II.
    • Myrtaceae: myrtle, gum (Eucalyptus), bottlebrush (Callistemon), tea-tree, clove, guava
    • Onagraceae: evening primrose, fuchsia, willowherb, enchanter's nightshade
    • Lythraceae: purple loosestrife, pomegranate
  • Geraniales: cranesbill (Geranium) and the garden geranium (Pelargonium)


Inevitably this will have proof-reading mistakes in some of the taxon names, and be missing some of your favourite plants. Possibly the best detailed website on the APG III classification (with copious explanation) is the Angiosperm Phylogeny Website. A simple one-page table of all the orders and families is at The Seed Site. The web's other free encyclopaedia is also using APG III now, and compares current taxa to more traditional ones, which is very useful.

In APG IV (2016) rosids and Saxifragales are grouped as superrosids, while asterids, Caryophyllales and Santalales are grouped as superasterids. The position of the COM clade is uncertain: it might be basal in rosids. Boraginaceae was elevated to order Boraginales.

2014-05-22 Added order Pandanales; families Altingiaceae, Dipsacaceae, Haemodoraceae, Hamamelidaceae, Pedaliaceae, Smilacaceae, and Tamaricaceae; and 20-odd common names, mostly ones that are familiar names though I don't actually know what they are, such as catalpa, goldenrod, kowhai, liquidambar, philodendron, sassafras, tamarind, and witch hazel.
2014-05-29 Tch, ivy is not holly!
2014-06-25 Add mock orange (Philadelphus)
2015-06-15 Palmae is family Arecaceae, not order Arecales. Add Orobanchaceae.
2015-06-22 Peonies are in Paeoniaceae, not Paeonaceae; but dogwood is Cornaceae in Cornales, not Corneaceae in Corneales. Add rye.
2017-09-26 APG IV
2017-10-23 I've had bits of Asparagales wrong all this time.

An"gi*o*sperm (#), n. [Angio- + Gr. , , seed.] Bot.

A plant which has its seeds inclosed in a pericarp.

⇒ The term is restricted to exogenous plants, and applied to one of the two grand divisions of these species, the other division including gymnosperms, or those which have naked seeds. The oak, apple, beech, etc., are angiosperms, while the pines, spruce, hemlock, and the allied varieties, are gymnosperms.

 

© Webster 1913.

Log in or register to write something here or to contact authors.