Description
Key Characters:
Growth Form:
Shrubs or trees.
Stems:
Stems and branches with very strong, tough, often shiny fibers.
Roots:
Leaves:
Leaves simple.
Alternate or opposite.
Blades herbaceous or coriaceous.
Margins entire.
Pinnately veined.
Sessile or short–petiolate.
Stipules absent.
Flowers:
Flowers in terminal or axillary, spicate, racemose, or capitate, sessile or pedunculate inflorescences, rarely with deciduous tracts.
Flowers bisexual (perfect), polygamous, or unisexual, actinomorphic; sweetly scented at night.
Calyx (3)4–5(6)-lobed, tubular or funnelform, sometimes articulated above the ovary, the lobes usually imbricate.
Corolla of as many or twice as many petals as calyx lobes; petals small and often scale-like, usually not petaloid, or absent.
Stamens as many or twice as many as the calyx lobes, in 2 distinct whorls.
Ovary superior, 2–5(–12)-carpellate, with as many cells, or when 2-carpellate, pseudomonomerous and 1-celled; ovules solitary and pendulous in each cell, anatropous to hemitropous; style filiform, ± excentric; stigma usually capitate, papillate.
Fruit:
Fruit usually indehiscent; fleshy or dry; rarely a loculicidal capsules; often enclosed in portions of the persistent calyx tube.
Seeds usually with a caruncle-like appendage; outer coat usually crustaceous; embryo straight; endosperm usually scanty.
Ploidy:
Habitat:
Elevation Range: