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Encyclopedia > Aristolochiales


Birthwort family

Calico Flower (Aristolochia littoralis)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Piperales
Family: Aristolochiaceae
Genera

See text


The Aristolochiaceae, or the Birthworth family, are a family of flowering plants with 7 genera and about 400 species belonging to the order Piperales.


The Aristolochiaceae are basal dicots (paleodicots), most closely related orders Magnoliales, Laurales, Canellales, and Piperales, which form a monophyletic clade called the Magnoliids.


Some newer classification schemes, such as the Update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group, place the family Aristolochiacea in the order Piperales, but it is still quite common, though superseded, for the Aristolochiaceae to be assigned their own order (Aristolochiales).


They are mostly perennial, herbaceous plants, shrubs, woody vines or even lianas.


The membranous, cordate simple leaves are spread out, growing alternately along the stem on leaf stalks. The margins are commonly entire. There are no stipules.


The bizarre flowers are large to medium-sized, growing in the leaf axils. They are bilaterally or radially symmetrical.


Many members of Aristolochia and some of Asarum contain the toxin aristolochic acid, which discourages herbivores and is known to be carcinogenic in rats. Aristolochia itself is carcinogenic to humans.


Pipevine swallowtail butterflies lay their eggs on pipevine (Aristolochia species), and the larvae dine on the plant but are not affected by the toxin, which then offers the adult butterfly protection against predators.


Genera

External links

  • International Agency for Research on Cancer evaluation (http://monographs.iarc.fr/htdocs/monographs/vol82/82-01.html)
  • U.S. Food and Drug Administration alerts (http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/ds-bot.html)





  Results from FactBites:
 
Introduction to the Aristolochiales (559 words)
The Aristolochiales are a group of paleoherbs, a basal group of flowering plants.
The majority of the Aristolochiales are tropical, though a number of them range as far north as Canada, Scandinavia, and northern Japan.
Fossil Aristolochiales have been found in North America beginning in the Cretaceous, and macrofossil leaves are known through the Miocene.
Aristolochiales - definition of Aristolochiales in Encyclopedia (215 words)
The Aristolochiaceae are basal dicots (paleodicots), most closely related orders Magnoliales, Laurales, Canellales, and Piperales, which form a monophyletic clade called the Magnoliids.
Some newer classification schemes, such as the Update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group, place the family Aristolochiacea in the order Piperales, but it is still quite common, though superseded, for the Aristolochiaceae to be assigned their own order (Aristolochiales).
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  More results at FactBites »


 

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