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Published In: Genera Plantarum 384–385. 1789. (4 Aug 1789) (Gen. Pl.) Name publication detailView in BotanicusView in Biodiversity Heritage Library
 

Project Name Data (Last Modified On 6/2/2011)
Acceptance : Accepted
Project Data     (Last Modified On 6/3/2011)
Contributor Text: A. RADCLIFFE-SMITH
Contributor Institution: Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
General/Distribution: A very large family, the sixth largest amongst the Anthophyta, with 300 genera and 5000 species, subcosmopolitan but with the strongest representation in the humid tropics and subtropics of both hemispheres. Represented in Pakistan by 24 genera of which 11 are not native.
Comment/Acknowledgements: Acknowledgements: The financial assistance received from the United States Department of Agriculture under P.L. 480 with the coordination of the Pakistan Agricultural Research Council, Islamabad, is thankfully acknowledged.

 

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Dioecious or monoecious often poisonous, prostrate, erect or scandent annual, biennial or perennial herbs, shrubs or trees, succulent or not, spiny or unarmed, sometimes with phylloclades, with or without a milky latex or coloured sap. Indumentum 0 or of simple, branched or stellate hairs or peltate scales, the hairs sometimes urticating. Leaves usually alternate, sometimes opposite or whorled, occasionally all 3, green or scarious and squamiform, petiolate or sessile, stipulate or exstipulate, simple, lobed or compound, entire or toothed, peltate or not, palminerved or penninerved, glandular or eglandular. Stipules free or connate, sometimes spathaceous, membranaceous, capilliform, glandular or spiny, subpersistent to readily caducous. Inflorescences terminal, axillary, lateral or leaf-opposed, cymose, paniculate, racemose, spicate or cyathial, or with the flowers fasciculate or solitary. Flowers unisexual, usually actinomorphic and small to minute. Calyx in both sexes usually of 3-6 imbricate, valvate or open equal or unequal lobes or free sepals, often dissimilar between the sexes, rarely the ♀ calyx turbinate or spathaceous, sometimes accrescent, minute or O. Corolla in one or both sexes of 3-6 free (rarely united), subvalvate or imbricate petals, or petals minute or 0. Disc in the ♂ flowers of 5-6, occasionally more, free or united glands, or disc annular, cupular or 0; in the ♀ flowers hypogynous, usually annular or cupular, entire or lobed, rarely glands free, sometimes 0. Stamens (1-) 3-100 (-1000), free or connate, simple, rarely branched, anthers usually 2-locular and longitudinally dehiscent, erect or inflexed in bud, the cells usually parallel and adnate to the connective, sometimes free, variously positioned. Pistillode present or 0. Ovary superior, usually sessile, usually 3-celled; placentation exile, the ovules solitary or paired in each loculus. Styles usually 3, free or united, erect or spreading, entire, bifid or laciniate, the inner faces stigmatic. Staminodes sometimes present. Fruit usually schizocarpic, often dehiscing into 3 (occasionally less or more) bivalved cocci leaving a persistent columella, or else fruit indehiscent and drupaceous. Seeds 1 or 2 per cell, or by abortion 1 per fruit, carunculate or not, smooth or variously ornamented and sculptured, concolorous or variously patterned; endosperm usually copious and fleshy; embryo straight, radicle superior, cotyledons usually broad and flat (not Stenolobeae [not Pakistan]).
 

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1.Female & male flowers much-reduced and enclosed within a gland-bearing involucre; stamen 1; milky latex present
Euphorbia
1.Female & male Flowers not as above; stamens 2 or more; latex present or absent
2.Ovary-cells 2-ovuled; latex absent
3.Male sepals valvate in bud
Bridelia
3.Male sepals imbricate in bud
4.Flowers in spikes, racemes or panicles
Antidesma
4.Flowers fasciculate in axillary glomerules, or solitary
5.Disc present in the male Flowers
6.Petals present
Andrachne
6.Petals absent
7.Pistillode present in the male flowers
Flueggea
7.Pistillode absent from the male flowers
Phyllanthus
5.Disc absent from the male flowers
8.Calyx-tube turbinate or campanulate
Breynia
8.Calyx-tube 0 or almost so
9.Styles ± completely fused into a column
Glochidion
9.Styles connate only at the base
Putranjiva
2.Ovary-cells 1-ovuled; latex present or absent
10.Petals present, at least in the male flowers
11.Indumentum stellate and/or lepidote
12.Fruit large, drupaceous, indehiscent
Aleurites
12.Fruit large, regmatiform, dehiscent
13.Filaments free, incurved in bud
Croton
13.Filaments fused into a column, erect in bud
Chrozophora
11.Indumentum simple, glandular or not
14.Fruit indehiscent or tardily dehiscent
Vernicia
14.Fruit readily dehiscent
15.Inflorescences racemose
Codiaeum
15.Inflorescences cymose
Jatropha
10.Petals absent
16.Male calyx open in bud
17.Leaves alternate
Sapium
17.Leaves opposite
Excoecaria
16.Male calyx open in bud
18.Male calyx-lobes imbricate
19.Leaves usually deeply-lobed, rarely simple
Manihot
19.Leaves usually simple, less often lobed
Baliospermum
18.Male calyx-lobes valvate
20.Leaves palmately-lobed
21.Inflorescences paniculate; bracts soon falling; stamens branched
Ricinus
21.Inflorescences congested, subtended by 2 large persistent foliaceous bracts; stamens unbranched
Dalechampia
20.Leaves not lobed
22.Herbs or shrubs; anthers cylindrical
Acalypha
22.Trees or shrubs; anthers subglobose to oblong
23.Leaves opposite; fruit usually drupaceous, sometimes dehiscent
Trewia
23.Leaves alternate; fruit dehiscent, covered with dark red powdery granules
Mallotus
 
 
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