Aizoaceae

Aizoaceae
Sesuvium portulacastrum
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Aizoaceae
Martynov
Genera

See text

Aizoaceae or Ficoidaceae (the fig-marigold family or ice plant family) is a family of dicotyledonous flowering plants containing 135 genera and about 1900 species. They are commonly known as stone plants, carpet weeds or vygies. Species that resemble stones or pebbles are sometimes called mesembs. Several species are known as "ice plants" because of the glistening globular bladder cells covering their stems, fruit and leaves.

Description

The family is widely recognised by taxonomists, although once it went by the botanical name "Ficoideae", now disallowed. The APG II system of 2003 (unchanged from the APG system of 1998) also recognises the family, and assigns it to the order Caryophyllales in the clade core eudicots. The APG II system also classes the former families Mesembryanthemaceae Fenzl, Sesuviaceae Horan. and Tetragoniaceae Link under the family Aizoaceae.

Mesembryanthemum guerichianum seedling, showing the bladder cells that inspired the name "ice plant".

Most species (96%, 1782 species in 132 genera) in this family are endemic to arid or semiarid parts of southern Africa,[1] but a few are from Australia and the Central Pacific. Most of these species are succulents and belong to the subfamilies Mesembryanthemoideae and Ruschioideae and are loosely termed mesems or mesembs.

Most fig-marigolds are herbaceous, rarely somewhat woody, with stems growing either erect or prostrate. Leaves are simple, opposite or alternate, and more or less succulent with entire (or rarely toothed) margins. Flowers are perfect in most species (but unisexual in some), actinomorphic, and appear singularly or in few-flowered cymes developing from the leaf axils. Sepals are typically five (3-8) and more or less connate (fused) below. True petals are absent. However, some species have numerous linear petals derived from staminodes. The fruit is a capsule with one to numerous seeds per cell.

A few species (especially Carpobrotus edulis, commonly called ice plant) have been widely introduced and become invasive.

They are called ice plant because "they have bladder-like hairs on the leaf surface that reflect and refract light in a manner to make it appear that they sparkle like ice crystals."[2]

Uses

Several Aizoaceae are edible, including:

Carpobrotus edulis was introduced to California to stabilize soil along railroad tracks.

Ice plant thrives in southern California. People surround their property with it believing it will act as a firewall to protect against wildfires; ice plant contains so much water, it does not burn if carefully maintained.

Genera

Aptenia cordifolia or rock rose
Ice plant (Carpobrotus edulis)
Jensenobotrya lossowiana
Drosanthemum speciosum
Cephalophyllum spec.
Odontophorus angustifolius Richtersveld N.P.
Fenestraria rhopalophylla

Subfamily Aizooideae

Subfamily Mesembryanthemoideae

  • Phyllobolus N.E.Br
  • Prenia N.E.Br
  • Pseudobrownanthus Ihlenf. & Bittrich
  • Psilocaulon N.E.Br
  • Sceletium N.E.Br
  • Synaptophyllum N.E.Br[4]

Subfamily Ruschioideae

Tribe Apatesieae
  • Apatesia N.E.Br
  • Carpanthea N.E.Br
  • Caryotophora Leistner
  • Conicosia N.E.Br
  • Hymenogyne Haw.
  • Saphesia N.E.Br
  • Skiatophytum L.Bolus[5]
Tribe Dorotheantheae
  • Aethephyllum N.E.Br
  • Cleretum N.E.Br
  • Dorotheanthus Schwantes[6]
Tribe Ruschiae
  • Namibia (Schwantes) Schwantes
  • Nananthus N.E.Br
  • Nelia Schwantes
  • Neohenricia L.Bolus
  • Octopoma N.E.Br
  • Odontophorus N.E.Br
  • Oophytum N.E.Br
  • Ophthalmophyllum Dinter & Schwantes
  • Orthopterum L.Bolus
  • Oscularia Schwantes
  • Ottosonderia L.Bolus
  • Pleiospilos N.E.Br
  • Polymita N.E.Br
  • Psammophora Dinter & Schwantes
  • Rabiea N.E.Br
  • Rhinephyllum N.E.Br
  • Rhombophyllum (Schwantes) Schwantes
  • Ruschia Schwantes
  • Ruschianthemum Friedrich
  • Ruschianthus L.Bolus
  • Schlechteranthus Schwantes
  • Schwantesia Dinter
  • Scopelogena L.Bolus
  • Smicrostigma N.E.Br
  • Stayneria L.Bolus
  • Stoeberia Dinter & Schwantes
  • Stomatium Schwantes
  • Tanquana H.E.K.Hartmann & Liede
  • Titanopsis Schwantes
  • Trichodiadema Schwantes
  • Vanheerdea L.Bolus ex H.E.K.Hartmann
  • Vanzijlia L.Bolus
  • Vlokia S.A.Hammer
  • Wooleya L.Bolus
  • Zeuktophyllum N.E.Br[7]

Subfamily Sesuvioideae

Incertae sedis

The Desert House at Marsh Botanical Garden.

Footnotes

  1. Chesselet, P., Smith, G.F., Burgoyne, P.M., Klak, C., Hammer, S.A., Hartmann, H.E.K., Kurzweil, H., van Jaarsveld, E.J., van Wyk, B-E. & Leistner, O.A (2000). "Seed Plants of Southern Africa". Strelitzia. 10: 360–410.
  2. Smith, Curtis. "Ice plant". Southwest Yard & Garden. New Mexico State University. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  3. "GRIN Genera of Aizoaceae subfam. Aizooideae". Germplasm Resources Information Network. Retrieved 2011-03-04.
  4. "GRIN Genera of Aizoaceae subfam. Mesembryanthemoideae". Germplasm Resources Information Network. Retrieved 2011-03-04.
  5. "GRIN Genera of Aizoaceae tribe Apatesieae". Germplasm Resources Information Network. Retrieved 2011-03-04.
  6. "GRIN Genera of Aizoaceae tribe Dorotheantheae". Germplasm Resources Information Network. Retrieved 2011-03-04.
  7. "GRIN Genera of Aizoaceae tribe Ruschiae". Germplasm Resources Information Network. Retrieved 2011-03-04.
  8. "GRIN Genera of Aizoaceae subfam. Sesuvioideae". Germplasm Resources Information Network. Retrieved 2011-03-04.

References

External links

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