Hamamelidaceae - : The Witch Hazel Family
Hamamelidaceae - : The Witch Hazel Family
Hamamelidaceae - : The Witch Hazel Family
Hamamelidaceae -- comments
Betulaceae -- comments
Fagaceae -- the beech and oak family (9/1000; Worldwide temperate with a few
tropical; important member of northern temperate habitats and some montane tropical habitats)
Habit shrubs or trees
Leaves alternate, simple, stipulate with caducous stipules
Inflorescences staminate inflorescence an erect or pendulous spike or head;
pistillate inflorecence of 1-3 (-7) flowers subtended by a cupule of numerous
connate bractlets
Special floral characters flowers always imperfect, staminate inflorescences in
catkins or spikes, pistillate flowers (or flower) subtended by a cupule
Calyx of pistillate flowers: 2-8 sepals very reduced; connate and adnate to ovary
Calyx of staminate flowers: 2-7 sepals connate
Corolla absent
Androecium 4-many stamens distinct
Gynoecium 3-7 carpels; connate; inferior; 3-7 locules with 2 axile ovules/locule;
styles as many as carpels
Fruit= nut subtended or surrounded by a woody cup-like or bur-like cupule
2-7 4- 2-8 3-7
(Floral formula: Ca A AND Ca G )
Hamamelidae
Fagaceae -- comments
Comments: Some claim that the family contains the most biomass
of any dicot group, hinting at the dominance this group displays in
many temperate and montane tropical habitats. The wood is
extremely valuable as lumber, firewood, etc. Edible nuts come from
Castanea, Fagus, and Quercus (if leached of tannins). Lithocarpus
and some others are commercial sources of tannins.
The cupule, found subtending or enveloping the pistillate flower or flowers in all
members of this family, is a very unique characteristic of this family. The latest
theory is that this structure is a highly reduced branching system, and is all that
remains of a much larger pistillate inflorescence.
Involucres are composed of bracts that are modified leaves (remember the family
Asteraceae?). Because the bracts that subtend or surround the pistillate
inflorescence in the Fagaceae are interpreted to be part of a reduced branching
system, it is more accurate to call this structure a cupule.
Hamamelidae
Moraceae -- comments
Some Genera: Morus (mulberry); Maclura (osage-orange); Ficus (fig), Artocarpus
(breadfruit, jackfruit)
Notes: Ficus (800+ spp.) is a very large genus with milky latex, a
variety of habits, and some tasty syconiums (the fig fruit). A must
see is the inflorescence of the genus Dorstenia to get an idea of a
transformation series from the mulberry- type (spike) to the
Dorstenia-type to the fig-type (syconium) inflorescence.
Read W&K about the special pollination syndrome that is associated
with the inflorescence of figs. It is interesting to know that although
the ancient Romans did not know about the wasps and this
pollination syndrome, they noticed that if they planted new fig trees
too far away from established figs, they did not were not able to get
fruit set on those newly planted, isolated fig trees!!
-family Hamamelidae