Gentianales
Families, & Facts
Gentianales, gentian order of flowering plants, consisting of five families with 1,121 genera and more than 20,000 species. The families are Gentianaceae, Rubiaceae, Apocynaceae (including Secamonoideae and Asclepiadoideae), Loganiaceae, and Gelsemiaceae. Except for the small Gelsemiaceae, the families of Gentianales have many species and are important sources of ornamental plants and drugs.
coffee plant
Members of Gentianales have simple leaves that are opposite or whorled (two or more per node). The leaves are usually accompanied by stipules (small leaflike appendages at the base of the leaves), which are sometimes reduced to a ridge on the stem between adjacent leaf stalks. Some members secrete mucilage from thick glandular hairs (colleters) at the base of the leaf stalk or on the adjacent stipules, and many produce iridoid compounds, cardiotonic glycosides, or indole alkaloids to deter herbivores. The flowers are usually showy and alike in size and shape (regular), and the petals are usually joined. In bud the petals are either regularly overlapping (imbricate or convolute) or else valvate (nonoverlapping). The carpels are generally united to form a compound ovary (although they usually become separated secondarily in Apocynaceae); the ovules possess one integument (early stage of seed coat); and the nucellus (the nutritive tissue beneath the integument) is one-layered. The fruits are varied, usually with numerous seeds, and the ovary is generally in a superior position within the flower, except for the mostly inferior ovaries of Rubiaceae. The majority of species are native to the tropics or warm temperate regions, although Gentianaceae and Rubiaceae are well represented in the north temperate zone. Trees, shrubs, and vines are characteristic of this order, more so than annual or perennial herbs.
Gentianales belongs to the core asterid clade (organisms with a single common ancestor), or sympetalous lineage of flowering plants, in the lamiids clade of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group IV (APG IV) botanical classification system (see angiosperm).
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