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Encyclopedia > Buxaceae

This article is about the box tree. For the receptacle, see box.


Boxwoods
Buxus sempervirens
Buxus sempervirens
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Sapindales/Buxales
Family: Buxaceae
Genus: Buxus
Species

(70 species)

The boxwoods (North America) or boxes (all other English-speaking countries) are a genus (Buxus) of about 70 species of evergreen shrubs and trees in the family Buxaceae.


The boxes are found in Europe, Asia, Africa, and Central America. They are quite commonly used for hedges and topiary, and the dense wood (called "boxwood" in all countries) is valued for wood carving. They have small leaves opposite each other, usually rounded and leathery. The flowers are small and yellow-green, with both sexes present on a plant, and thus boxwoods are usually grown for their foliage. They are particularly favoured for hedges and topiary in formal gardens. Given time, neat low hedging can grow to enormous size, as at Powis Castle in north Wales. Often, however, they are kept dwarfed, as in the famous gardens at Château Villandry in France.


The most familiar species is Buxus sempervirens, the English Box, Common Box, or Common Boxwood, which comes in both "American" and "European" types.


The American Boxwood Society specializes in the study of boxwoods, and has produced a number of publications.


The plant has lent its name to numerous places, for example Bexhill_on_Sea in Sussex and Box Hill in Surrey, and to other things, including the Boxwood Festival for flutists.


External link

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  Results from FactBites:
 
Buxaceae - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (259 words)
Buxaceae is a small family of four or five genera and about 90-120 species of flowering plants.
In both APG and APG II the family Buxaceae is unplaced as to order and left among the basal lineages of the eudicots.
Buxaceae, Didymelaceae, Stylocerataceae in L. Watson and M.J. Dallwitz (1992 onwards).
Buxaceae (348 words)
To learn more about phylogenetic trees, please visit our Phylogenetic Biology pages.
Development of inflorescences and flowers in Buxaceae and the problem of perianth interpretation.
Phylogenetic relationships in Buxaceae based on nuclear internal transcribed spacers and plastid ndhF sequences.
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