Zygophyllaceae

R.Br. (1814)

This name is accepted

Kingdom: Viridiplantae Phylum: Magnoliophyta Class/Clade: Eudicot-Rosids Order: Zygophyllales Family: Zygophyllaceae Genus:

Description

Key Characters:

Growth Form: Shrubs, annual or perennial herbs, or rarely small trees.

Stems: Stems often sympodial and swollen or jointed at the nodes.

Roots:

Leaves: Leaves compound (pinnate, occasionally 2(3)–foliate) or simple. Opposite or occasionally alternate. Blades often strongly resinous. Blades fleshy to coriaceous. Petiolate to subsessile. <b>Stipules</b> usually well-developed, paired, slender, persistent, sometimes spinescent, or rarely absent. Stipules usually well-developed, paired, slender, persistent, sometimes spinescent, or rarely absent.

Flowers: Flowers in cymose or rarely racemose inflorescence or solitary. Flowers bisexual (perfect) or rarely unisexual, actinomorphic or rarely irregular. <b>Calyx</b> of (4)5 sepals; sepals distinct or occasionally connate at base, imbricate or valvate. <b>Corolla</b> of (0,4)5 petals; petals usually distinct, imbricate, convolute, or rarely valvate, deciduous or rarely marcescent. <b>Stamens</b> (1)2(3) times as many as petals, often unequal in length; <u>filaments</u> distinct, often glandular or with appendages at base; <u>anthers</u> dithecal, opening by longitudinal slits. <b>Ovary</b> superior (2–)4–5(–12)-carpellate, with as many cells, sessile or rarely stipitate, placentation axile or rarely basal; <u>ovules</u> 1 to numerous per cell, pendulous or rarely ascending, usually epitropous, anatropous to sometimes hemitropous, campylotropous, or orthotropous; <u>style</u> 1, rarely divided; <u>stigmas</u> capitate or distinct.

Fruit: Fruit usually a loculicidal or septicidal capsules or a schizocarp; rarely a berry or drupe. <b>Seeds</b> 1 to numerous; <u>embryo</u> straight or slightly curved; <u>endosperm</u> hard and oily or rarely absent.

Ploidy:

Habitat:

Elevation Range:

Historical Distribution

Uses and Culture

USES

Natural History

Island Status

Dispersal Agents


Pollinators

Notes

  • Also observed by Herbst growing at Bradshaw Airfield, ca. 1,890 m, Pohakuloa Training Area, Hawai'i. First collected on Kaua'i in 1941
  • Description digitized by Ashley wilson
  • Description digitized from the Manual of the Flowering Plants of Hawaii
  • First collected on Kaua'i in 1941
  • The peduncles are densely antrorsely strigose and hirsute. Also observed by Herbst growing at Bradshaw Airfield, ca. 1,890 m, P6hakuloa Training Area, Hawai'i.

Bibliography

Name Published In: Voy. Terra Austral. 2: 545. 1814 [19 Jul 1814] (as &quot;Zygophylleae&quot;) (1814)

Occurrences

SNo. Scientific Name Scientific Name Authorship Locality Habitat Basis of Record Recorded By Record Number Island Source Date