Description
Key Characters:
Growth Form:
Vines or lianas, climbing by axillary tendrils representing modified inflorescences, sometimes Annual or perennial herbs, shrubs or trees.
Stems:
Axils usually with a primary and an accessory bud, the primary bud usually either abortive or developing into an inflorescence or a tendril, the vegetative branches then developing from the accessory bud.
Roots:
Leaves:
Leaves simple or rarely compound.
Alternate or very rarely opposite.
Margins entire, toothed, or palmately lobed.
Petiolate, petioles usually with extrafloral nectaries.
Stipules small or absent, often with a pair of extrafloral nectaries at base of blade.
Flowers:
Flowers in various types of cymose or rarely racemose inflorescences, sometimes solitary.
Flowers bisexual (perfect) or sometimes unisexual, actinomorphic. Hypanthium saucer–shaped to tubular, rarely absent; extrastaminal corona usually present, borne on the hypanthium to the inside of the petals, variously developed, often consisting of rows of filaments or scales; nectary disk (staminodial in origin) usually surrounding ovary.
Calyx of (3–)5(–8) sepals; sepals ± connate at base, imbricate, persistent.
Corolla of (0–)5(–8) petals, alternate with the sepals, ± connate at base, imbricate.
Stamens (4)5(–10) or rarely numerous, usually alternate with the petals; filaments distinct or raised on an androgynophore, rarely connate into a tube; anthers dithecal, versatile, opening by longitudinal slits.
Ovary superior, borne at the summit of the androgynophore, rarely subsessile, (2)3(–5)-carpellate, 1-celled, placentation parietal; ovules usually numerous, anatropous, funiculus usually long; styles as many as carpels, distinct or connate a base; stigmas capitate, clavate, or discoid.
Fruit:
Fruit a globose to ovoid loculicidal capsules.
Seeds (1–3)numerous; reticulate and pitted; aril membranous; unilateral; endosperm soft; fleshy; and oily.
Ploidy:
Habitat:
Elevation Range: