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Ericaceae
Erica arborea
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Asterids
Order: Ericales
Family: Ericaceae
Juss.
Genera

See text.

Ericaceae, the heath family or the heather family is a plant family, comprising mostly calcifuge (lime-hating) plants that thrive in acidic soils. Many well-known plants of the Ericaceae live in temperate climates, such as cranberry, blueberry, various heaths and heathers (Erica, Cassiope, Daboecia, Calluna vulgaris etc), huckleberry, azalea and rhododendron. However, the family also contains many tropical species.[1]

The Ericaceae consists of herbs, dwarf shrubs, shrubs and trees with leaves that are usually alternate or whorled, simple and without stipules, and hermaphrodite flowers. The flowers show considerable variability. The petals are often fused (sympetalous) with shapes ranging from narrowly tubular to funnelform or widely bowl-shaped. The corollas are usually radially symmetrical (actinomorphic) but many flowers of the genus Rhododendron are somewhat bilaterally symmetrical (zygomorphic).

Recent genetic research by the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group has resulted in the inclusion of the formerly recognised families Empetraceae, Epacridaceae, Monotropaceae, Prionotaceae and Pyrolaceae into Ericaceae. Most Ericaceae (except Monotropaceae, Prionotaceae and Pyrolaceae) form mycorrhizae, where fungi grow in and around the roots and provide the plant with nutrients. This symbiotic relationship is considered crucial to the success of members of the family in edaphically stressful environments worldwide.[2]


Genera

Vaccinium (Ericaceae) berries, from top right: cranberries, red huckleberries, blueberries, lingonberries

References

  1. ^ See for example Kathleen A. Kron, E. Ann Powell and J. L. Luteyn (2002). "Phylogenetic relationships within the blueberry tribe (Vaccinieae, Ericaceae) based on sequence data from MATK and nuclear ribosomal ITS regions, with comments on the placement of Satyria". American Journal of Botany 89: 327–336. doi:10.3732/ajb.89.2.327. http://www.amjbot.org/cgi/content/full/89/2/327.  
  2. ^ Cairney, JWG & Meharg, AA (2003). Ericoid mycorrhiza: a partnership that exploits harsh edaphic conditions. European Journal of Soil Science 54, 735-740.
  • Walters, Dick R. and David J. Keil. Vascular Plant Taxonomy. Kendall\Hunt: 1996, Dubuque

External links


1911 encyclopedia

Up to date as of January 14, 2010

From LoveToKnow 1911

ERICACEAE, in botany, a natural order of plants belonging to the higher or gamopetalous division of Dicotyledons. They are woody plants, sometimes with a slender creeping stem as in bilberry, Vaccinium (fig. I), or Andromeda (fig. 2), or forming low bushes as in the heaths, or larger, sometimes becoming tree-like, as in species of Rhododendron. The leaves are alternate, opposite or whorled in arrangement, and in their form and structure show well - marked adaptation for life in dry or exposed situations. Thus in the true heaths they are needle-like, with the margins often rolled back to form a groove or an almost closed chamber on the under side. In others such as Rhododendron or Arbutus they are of ten leathery and evergreen, the strongly cuticularized upper surface protecting a water-storing tissue situated above the green layers of the leaf. The flowers are sometimes solitary and axillary or terminal as in Andromeda, but are generally arranged in racemose inflorescences at the end of the branches as in Arbutus and Rhododendron, or on small lateral shoots as in Erica. They are hermaphrodite and generally regular with parts in 4 or 5, thus: sepals 4 or 5, petals 4 or 5, stamens 8 or io in two series, the outer of which is opposite the petals, and carpels 4 or 5. The corolla is usually more or less bell-shaped, and in the heaths persists in a dry state in the fruit. The petals with the stamens are situated on the outer edge of a FIG. 2. - Andromeda Hypnoides, nat. size. I, Flower; 2, Unripe fruit cut across; 3, Stamen - all enlarged.

honey-secreting disk. The anthers show a very great variety in shape, the halves are often more or less free and often appendaged; they open to allow the escape of the pollen by a terminal pore or slit. The carpels are united to form a 4to 5chambered ovary, which bears a simple elongated style ending in a capitate stigma; each ovary-chamber contains one to many ovules attached to a central placenta. The brightly coloured FIG. 3.

1, Flowering shoot of Erica cinerea, about 12 nat. size.

2, Flower cut lengthwise.

3, Stamen showing appendages and porous dehiscence of anther.

4, Capsule showing the loculicidal dehiscence; a few seeds re corolla, the presence of nectar and the scent render the flowers attractive to insects, and the projection of the stigma beyond the anthers favours crossing. The fruit is generally a capsule containing many seeds, as in Erica (fig. 3) or Rhododendron; sometimes a berry as in Arbutus. The order falls into four distinct tribes, which are characterized by the relative position of the ovary and by the fruit and seed. They are as follows: I. Rhododendron tribe, characterized by capsular fruit, seed with loose coat, deciduous petals and anthers without appendages. It consists mainly of the great genus Rhododendron (in which Azalea is included by recent botanists), which is chiefly FIG. I. - Vaccinium vitis-idaea, with leaf and flower, nat. size. 1, Flower of V. myrtillus, cut lengthwise. 2, Fruit of same.

main attached to the central axis.

5, Diagram of the flower having four sepals, four divisions of the corolla, eight stamens in two rows, and four divisions of the pistil.

developed in the mountains of eastern Asia, many species occurring on the Himalayas. Dabeocia, St Dabeoc's heath, occurs in Ireland.

2. Arbutus Tribe

Fruit a berry or capsule, petals deciduous and anthers with bristle-like appendages, chiefly north temperate to arctic in distribution. Arbutus Unedo, the strawberry-tree, so called from its large scarlet berry, is a southern European species which extends into south Ireland. Arctostaphylos (bearberry) and Andromeda are arctic and alpine genera occurring in Britain. Epigaea repens is the trailing arbutus or mayflower of Atlantic America.

3. Vaccinium Tribe

Ovary inferior, fruit a berry. Extends from the north temperate zone to the mountains of the tropics. Vaccinium, the largest genus, has four British species: V. Myrtillus is the bilberry, blaeberry or whortleberry, V. Vitis-Idaea the cowberry, and V. Oxycoccos the cranberry. This tribe is sometimes regarded as a separate order Vacciniaceae, distinguished by its inferior ovary.

4. Erica Tribe

Fruit usually a capsule, seeds round, not winged; corolla persisting round the ripe fruit; anthers often appendaged. The largest genus is Erica, the true heath, with over 400 species, the great majority of which are confined to the Cape; others occur on the mountains of tropical Africa and in Europe and North Africa, especially the Mediterranean region. E. cinerea (purple heather) and E. Tetralix (cross-leaved heath) are common British heaths. Calluna is the ling or Scotch heather.


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Wiktionary

Up to date as of January 15, 2010

Definition from Wiktionary, a free dictionary

Contents

Translingual

Etymology

Latin erica (heather).

Proper noun

Ericaceae

  1. (taxonomy) A taxonomic family within the order Ericales — many calcifuge plants.

Translations

Hyponyms

See also


Wikispecies

Up to date as of January 23, 2010

From Wikispecies

Taxonavigation

Classification System: APG II (down to family level)

Main Page
Cladus: Eukaryota
Regnum: Plantae
Cladus: Angiospermae
Cladus: Eudicots
Cladus: core eudicots
Cladus: Asterids
Ordo: Unassigned Asterids
Ordo: Ericales
Familia: Ericaceae
Subfamiliae: Arbutoideae - Cassiopoideae - Enkianthoideae - Ericoideae - Harrimanelloideae - Monotropoideae - Styphelioideae - Vaccinioideae

Names

Ericaceae Juss.

Type genus: Erica L.

Vernacular name

日本語: ツツジ科
Русский: Вересковые
Suomi: Kanervakasvit
Türkçe: Fundagiller
Українська: Вересові

References

Wikimedia Commons For more multimedia, look at Ericaceae on Wikimedia Commons.

Simple English

Ericaceae
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked) Eudicots
(unranked) Asterids
Order: Ericales
Family: Ericaceae
Juss.
Genera

See text.

Ericaceae is a family of flowering plants in the order Ericales. Plants of this family grows both in Northern Hemisphere and Southern Hemisphere. The common english name of Ericaceae is heath family. [[File:|thumb|left|upright=0.7|Flower diagram of Vaccinium, well-known genus of Ericaceae.]]

Many plants of Ericaceae are shrubs, but there are also trees and herbs.

There are about 120[1] genera and about 4000[1] species in this family.

Many plants of Ericaceae are evergreen plants with small flowers in the shape of bells or tube. The color of flowers may be white, pink, red, violet, rarely yellow. It may be interest plants for gardens.

Fruits of some species are edible.

Some plants of Ericaceae have a poison in all their parts.

Genera

[[File:|thumb|Calluna vulgaris]]

File:Epacris longiflora
Epacris longiflora

[[File:|thumb|Erica calycina]] [[File:|thumb|Kalmia latifolia]]

[[File:|thumb|Zenobia pulverulenta]]

  • Acrostemon
  • Acrotriche
  • Agapetes
  • Agarista
  • Allotropa
  • Andersonia
  • Andromeda, Bog-rosemary. 1 or 2 species of small shrubs from bogs of northern parts of the Northern Hemisphere.
  • Anomalanthus
  • Anthopteropsis
  • Anthopterus
  • Arachnocalyx
  • Arbutus
  • Arctostaphylos
  • Astroloma
  • Bejaria
  • Brachyloma
  • Bruckenthalia
  • Bryanthus
  • Calluna
  • Calopteryx
  • Cassiope
  • Cavendishia
  • Ceratiola
  • Ceratostema
  • Chamaedaphne
  • Chimaphila
  • Coccosperma
  • Coilostigma
  • Comarostaphylis
  • Conostephium
  • Corema
  • Costera
  • Craibiodendron
  • Cyathodes
  • Daboecia
  • Demosthenesia
  • Didonica
  • Dimorphanthera
  • Diogenesia
  • Diplarche
  • Diplycosia
  • Disterigma
  • Dracophyllum. 60 species of shrubs or trees with long leaves from Australia and Oceania.
  • Empetrum
  • Elliottia
  • Epacris
  • Epigaea
  • Enkianthus
  • Eremia
  • Eremiella
  • Erica
  • Findlaya
  • Gaultheria
  • Gaylussacia
  • Gonocalyx
  • Grisebachia
  • Harrimanella
  • Hemitomes
  • Kalmia
  • Kalmiopsis
  • Killipiella
  • Lateropora
  • Ledothamnus
  • Ledum
  • Leiophyllum
  • Leucopogon
  • Leucothoe
  • Lissanthe
  • Loiseleuria
  • Lyonia
  • Macleana
  • Macnabia
  • Malea
  • Menziesia
  • Mitrastylus
  • Moneses
  • Monotoca
  • Monotropa
  • Monotropsis
  • Mycerinus
  • Nagelocarpus
  • Notopora
  • Oreanthes
  • Ornithostaphylos
  • Orthaea
  • Orthilia
  • Oxydendrum
  • Pellegrinia
  • Pentachondra
  • Pernettyopsis
  • Phyllodoce
  • Pieris
  • Pityopus
  • Platycalyx
  • Pleuricospora
  • Plutarchia
  • Polyclita
  • Prionotes
  • Psammisia
  • Pterospora
  • Pyrola
  • Rhododendron. 800 species of shrubs with beautiful flowers. What gardeners know as azalea is in fact some species of rhododendron.
  • Rhodothamnus
  • Richea. Shrubs or trees with long leaves from Tasmania and Australia.
  • Rusbya
  • Salaxis
  • Sarcodes
  • Satyria
  • Scyphogyne
  • Semiramisia
  • Simocheilus
  • Siphonandra
  • Sphyrospermum
  • Stokoeanthus
  • Styphelia
  • Sympieza
  • Syndsmanthus
  • Tepuia
  • Thamnus
  • Themistoclesia
  • Therorhodion
  • Thibaudia
  • Thoracosperma
  • Trochocarpa
  • Tsusiophyllum
  • Utleya
  • Vaccinium. 450 species of shrubs. Well-known species are blueberries, cranberries and huckleberries.
  • Woollsia
  • Xylococcus
  • Zenobia, Honeycup. Small shrubs from bogs of south-east of USA. 1 species.
[[File:|195px|center]]Bejaria imthurnii [[File:|219px|center]]Cassiope mertensiana [[File:|195px|center]]Dracophyllum secundum

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 MOBOT: Ericaceae

Other websites

For more multimedia, go to Category:Ericaceae.
Wikispecies has an entry on: Ericaceae








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