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youtube/watch?v=trWzDlRvv1M

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trWzDlRvv1M But first, a review Nepenthes, a pitcher plant in the Caryophillid group. Rosids I. Crassulaceae Grossulariaceae Onagraceae Euphorbiaceae. Rosids in general. Somewhat weakly supported Hypanthium in a lot of groups 18 orders 114 families

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  1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=trWzDlRvv1M But first, a review Nepenthes, a pitcher plant in the Caryophillid group

  2. Rosids I Crassulaceae Grossulariaceae Onagraceae Euphorbiaceae

  3. Rosids 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

  4. Rosids 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

  5. Crassulaceae • 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/

  6. CAM • 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

  7. CAM at night

  8. CAM during the day

  9. Sedum lanceolatum - Stonecrop

  10. Clementsia rhodantha – Queen’s Crown

  11. Sedum rosea or Rhodiola integrifolia – King’s crown

  12. Grossulariaceae • 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

  13. Ribes cereum – wax currant

  14. Ribes cereum in fruit

  15. Ribes lacustre – Prickly currant

  16. Onagraceae • 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

  17. Onagraceae

  18. Onagraceae distribution

  19. Onagraceae – Four lobed stigma

  20. Onagraceae – Note the hypanthium

  21. Onagraceae in cross-section

  22. Oenothera caespitosa

  23. Oenothera caespitosa

  24. Onagraceae • 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

  25. Chamerion angustifolium

  26. Chamerion angustifolium

  27. Euphorbiaceae • 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

  28. Euphorbiaceae • 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

  29. Euphorbiaceae

  30. Euphorbiaceae - Distribution

  31. Euphorbiaceae - Succulent

  32. Euphorbiaceae – milky sap

  33. Euphorbiaceae - flowers

  34. Euphorbiaceae - Cyanthium

  35. Poinsettia

  36. Cassava or manioc is in this family

  37. Roots of Manihot esculentahttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qtvhs0O2oJE

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