Taxonomy of Flowering Plants - LECTURE NOTES - Spring, 1998
Hugh D. Wilson - rm. 306, Butler Hall
25 February 1998
The Caryophyllidae
Family Overview - The Polygonales

Polygonaceae - the Buckwheat Family

Diversity:  A family of 30 genera and about 1,000 species of herbs (mostly) and some shrubs and (rarely) trees.  The ethnoflora includes, rhubarb (Rheum rhaponicum), a plant grown for its petioles, buckwheat (Fagopyrum esculentum)

Distribution:  Mostly centered in Northern and temperate parts of the World.  The Texas flora includes 5 genera and 58 species with species of 4 genera endemic to the State.

Floral structure:

 

Significant features:  Most species of this family, with the exception of the large genus Eriogonum (false buckwheat) show a unique vegetative feature at the node.  A modified stipule encloses the node for form a sheathing structure known as an ocrea.  The nodes also (like the Caryophyllaceae) tend to be swollen and this feature is signaled by the Genus name Polygonum which translates to 'many kneed', a reference to the swollen nodes.  The flowers are small, perfect (usually) and either show a bi- or uniseriate calyx that often continues to develop after anthesis (accrescent) to produce a winged enclosure for the fruit, a trigonal (three-sided) or lenticular (lens shaped) achene.

 
 
    Polygonum - nodes and ocrea

 
  Node of a sea grape (Coccoloba uvifera) with ocrea
 

  Eriogonum longifolium (the largest genus with 250 species) - flowers
 
 
Rheum officinale from Kohler's Medicinal Plants 


Rumex venosus in fruit (left) and a single, accrescent, winged sepal with the trigonal achene (right)
 
 
 

More information on the Polygonaceae


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