Liliaceae S.L. (Lily Family)

Liliaceae S.L. (Lily Family)

<p><strong>Liliaceae s.l. (Lily family) </strong></p><p>Photo: Ben Legler <br>Photo: Hannah Marx <br>Photo: Hannah Marx </p><p><strong>Xerophyllum tenax </strong><br><strong>Lilium columbianum </strong></p><p><strong>Trillium ovatum </strong></p><p><strong>Liliaceae s.l. (Lily family) </strong></p><p>Photo: Yaowu Yuan </p><p><strong>Fritillaria lanceolata </strong></p><p>Ref.1 <br>Textbook DVD KRR&amp;DLN </p><p><strong>Erythronium americanum </strong><br><strong>Allium vineale </strong></p><p><strong>Liliaceae s.l. (Lily family) </strong></p><p>Herbs; </p><p>Ref.2 </p><p>Stems often modified as underground rhizomes, corms, or bulbs; </p><p>Flowers <strong>actinomorphic</strong>; </p><p><strong>3 sepals and 3 petals or 6 tepals</strong>, <strong>6 stamens</strong>, </p><p>3 carpels, ovary superior (or inferior). </p><p><strong>Tulipa gesneriana </strong></p><p><strong>Liliaceae s.l. (Lily family) </strong></p><p>“Liliaceae” s.l. (sensu lato: “in the broad sense”) - Lily family; </p><p>288 genera/4950 species, including <em>Lilium, Allium, Trillium, Tulipa; </em></p><p>This family <em>is </em>treated in a very broad sense in this class, as in the <em>Flora of the Pacific Northwest</em>. The “Liliaceae” s.l. taught in this class is not monophyletic. </p><p>It is apparent now that the family should be treated in a narrower sense and some of the members should form their own families. Judd et al. recognize 15+ families: Agavaceae, Alliaceae, Amarylidaceae, Asparagaceae, Asphodelaceae, Colchicaceae, Dracaenaceae (Nolinaceae), Hyacinthaceae, Liliaceae, Melanthiaceae, Ruscaceae, Smilacaceae, Themidaceae, Trilliaceae, Uvulariaceae and more!!! (see web reading “Consider the Lilies”) </p><p><strong>Iridaceae (Iris family) </strong></p><p></p><ul style="display: flex;"><li style="flex:1">Photo: Hannah Marx </li><li style="flex:1">Photo: Hannah Marx </li></ul><p></p><p><strong>Iris pseudacorus </strong></p><p><strong>Iridaceae (Iris family) </strong></p><p></p><ul style="display: flex;"><li style="flex:1">Photo: Yaowu Yuan </li><li style="flex:1">Photo: Yaowu Yuan </li></ul><p></p><p></p><ul style="display: flex;"><li style="flex:1"><strong>Sisyrinchium douglasii </strong></li><li style="flex:1"><strong>Sisyrinchium sp. </strong></li></ul><p></p><p><strong>Iridaceae (Iris family) </strong></p><p>Iridaceae - 78 genera/1750 species, </p><p>Including <em>Iris, Gladiolus, Sisyrinchium</em>. </p><p>Herbs, aquatic or terrestrial; Underground stems as rhizomes, bulbs, or corms; </p><p>Leaves alternate,&nbsp;2-ranked and equitant <br>(oriented edgewise to the stem; </p><p>Ref.3 </p><p><strong>Gladiolus italicus </strong></p><p>Flowers actinomorphic or zygomorphic; </p><p><strong>3 sepals and 3 petals or 6 tepals</strong>; <strong>Stamens 3</strong>; <strong>Ovary </strong>of 3 fused carpels, <strong>inferior</strong>. </p><p><strong>Araceae (Arum family) </strong></p><p>Photo: Yaowu Yuan </p><p><strong>Lysichitum americanum </strong></p><p>Textbook DVD KRR </p><p><strong>Monstera deliciosa </strong></p><p><strong>Araceae (Arum family) </strong></p><p>Textbook DVD KRR&amp;DLN </p><p><strong>Spadix</strong>: Spike with a thickened, fleshy axis, as characteristic of members of the Araceae. </p><p><strong>Spike</strong>: Simple, indeterminate inflorescence with a single axis bearing sessile flowers. </p><p>Textbook DVD KRR&amp;DLN </p><p><strong>Spike </strong></p><p><strong>Arisaema triphyllum </strong></p><p><strong>Araceae (Arum family) </strong></p><p><strong>complete </strong>- all four whorls present <strong>incomplete </strong>- one or more whorls </p><p>missing <strong>perfect </strong>- both reproductive whorls present; bisexual </p><p><strong>imperfect </strong>- one reproductive </p><p>whorl missing; unisexual </p><p><strong>monoecious </strong>- plants with </p><p>imperfect (unisexual) flowers, in which both sexes are on the same plant </p><p><strong>dioecious </strong>- plants with imperfect </p><p>(unisexual) flower, in which each sex is on a separate plant </p><p><strong>Polygamous </strong>- plants with both </p><p>perfect (bisexual) and imperfect (unisexual) flowers on the same plant </p><p></p><ul style="display: flex;"><li style="flex:1">Textbook DVD KRR&amp;DLN </li><li style="flex:1">Textbook DVD KRR&amp;DLN </li></ul><p></p><p><strong>Arisaema triphyllum </strong></p><p><strong>Araceae (Arum family) </strong></p><p></p><ul style="display: flex;"><li style="flex:1">Photo: Yaowu Yuan </li><li style="flex:1">Ref.4 </li></ul><p></p><p><strong>Amorphophallus titanium </strong></p><p>Doug Ewing, our greenhouse manager, </p><p>holding an <em>Amorphophallus </em>plant </p><p><strong>Araceae (Arum family) </strong></p><p>Araceae - 109 genera/2830 species,&nbsp;Including <em>Lysichitum </em>(skunk cabbage), </p><p><em>Amorphophyllus </em>(corpse flower). </p><p>Herbs (some epiphytes), mostly tropical; Leaves simple to compound; </p><p><strong>Inflorescence consisting of </strong></p><p><strong>spathe </strong>- large leaf-like to petal-like bract subtending the flowers <strong>spadix</strong>- axis on which the flowers are borne often with a sterile extension towards the tip called an “<strong>appendix</strong>” </p><p><strong>Flowers unisexual </strong>(sometimes bisexual) </p><p>monoecious or dioecious; if monoecious, males flowers above, female flowers below </p><p>Fetid odor; </p><p><strong>Orchidaceae (Orchid family) </strong></p><p>Photo: Yaowu Yuan </p><p><strong>lobellum </strong><br><strong>Nctar spur </strong></p><p><strong>Bulbophyllum echinolabium </strong></p><p><strong>Lobellum</strong>: “Lip” of an orchid perianth; the adaxial member of the inner whorl of perianth parts (but due to rotation of the flower, at anthesis usually placed as the lowermost perianth part), and differentiated from the other perianth parts in size, form, and/or coloration. </p><p><strong>Orchidaceae (Orchid family) </strong></p><p>Textbook DVD KRR&amp;DLN </p><p><strong>Bletilla striata </strong></p><p><strong>Column</strong>: structure formed by the fused style and stigma plus stamens of orchids. <strong>Pollinium </strong>(pl. <strong>pollinia</strong>): mass of pollen grains transported as a unit, as in many Orchidaceae plants. </p><p><strong>Orchidaceae (Orchid family) </strong></p><p>These images are all from the same source, ref.6 </p><p><strong>Orchidaceae (Orchid family) </strong></p><p>Photo: Yaowu Yuan </p><p>5 minutes later </p><p>Mass of pollen grains (pollinia) transported as a unit by pollinators -all or nothing! to fertilize all eggs in another flower. </p><p>Photo: Yaowu Yuan </p><p><strong>Orchidaceae (epiphytic adaptation) </strong></p><p>Textbook DVD DLN </p><p><strong>Epidendrum radiatum </strong></p><p><strong>Epiphytic plants</strong>: plants that are supported by some structure other than their own stem (usually other plants). <br><strong>Pseudobulb</strong>: thickened internode on the stem of many epiphytic orchids . </p><p><strong>Orchidaceae (epiphytic adaptation) </strong></p><p>Modifications for drought resistance: -<strong>Pseudobulb</strong>, store water and nutrients; </p><p>-The thickened <strong>aerial roots </strong>strongly </p><p>mycorrhizal (mutualism with fungi), often covered with a <strong>velamen </strong>that absorbs water from air. </p><p>-<strong>Sunken stomata </strong>on leaves, allow CO2 in and </p><p>O2 out but little H2O out. -Thick <strong>waxy cuticle </strong>(waxy surface covering plant to prevent water loss). </p><p><strong>Velamen</strong>: a spongy multi-layered epidermis that covers the roots of many epiphytic orchids. </p><p><strong>Orchidaceae (Orchid family) </strong></p><p>Orchidaceae - 775 genera/19,5000 species. Perhaps the family with the largest number of species (20,000 - 45, 000); Many tropical epiphytic orchid species probably still unknown; Often very close association with insect pollinator – tight co-evolution. </p><p>Herbs, terrestrial or epiphytic (all terrestrial in PNW); </p><p><strong>Flowers zygomorphic, </strong></p><p>petals 3, one modified as a “<strong>labellum</strong>”; sepals 3, one may have a spur; pollen aggregated into <strong>pollinia</strong>; style, stigma, and stamens fused to form the <strong>column</strong>; </p><p><strong>ovary inferior</strong>. </p><p>Seeds minute, without endosperm, require a fungal partner to germinate successfully and for continued growth. Each ovary has 1000s of ovules; </p><p><strong>Monocots vs. Dicots </strong></p><p>Ref.7 </p>

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