Interesting Facts
Description
Family Asclepiadaceae
Herbs, shrubs
, or rarely treelike, with milky
or, less often, clear latex. Leaves simple
, opposite or occasionally whorled
, very rarely alternate, usually without obvious stipules, margin
nearly always entire. Inflorescences terminal
, axillary
, or extra-axillary
, cymose
, often condensed and umbel-like, occasionally a racemelike bostrychium. Flowers bisexual
, 5-merous, actinomorphic
. Sepals joined at base
only, often with 5 or more basal glands
in the sinuses. Corolla sympetalous
, reflexed
to urceolate
or salverform
; lobes
valvate
or overlapping in bud to right
or left. Corona
usually present, inserted
on corolla, stamens, or both. Stamens 5, usually inserted at base of corolla tube
and adhering to stigma head
to form gynostegium; filaments
usually connate
to form a tube enclosing ovaries; anthers
4-celled (Periplocoideae and Secamonoideae) or 2-celled (Asclepiadoideae), often with a membranous apical appendage
; pollen tetrads
contained loosely on a spatulate
translator
with a basal corpusculum (Periplocoideae), or pollen united into waxy pollinia, each attached through a caudicle
(stalk
) to the retinaculum (gland
) between adjacent
anthers to form a pollinarium
, pollinia 2 (Asclepiadoideae) or 4 (Secamonoideae) per pollinarium. Ovaries 2, free
, superior; ovules numerous
. Styles connate; stigma head fleshy. Fruit of 1 or 2 follicles. Seeds numerous, strongly compressed
, with a coma (a prominent
basal tuft of silky
hairs
) . Chromosome number x = (8-) 11 (or 12) .
Some 250 genera and over 2000 species: widespread in tropical
and subtropical
regions, especially in Africa and southern South America, with a moderate representation in northern and southeastern Asia; 44 genera (four endemic) and 270 species (153 endemic) in China.
Some authorities include this family
in the Apocynaceae. Genera 1-6 are sometimes placed in a separate family, the Periplocaceae, here regarded as a subfamily
, Periplocoideae. Genera 7-10 belong to the Secamonoideae and the remaining genera to the Asclepiadoideae. Many Chinese taxa are known only from dried material
, sometimes not well preserved, and it is likely that the study of living or spirit-preserved material could lead
to a reassessment of the taxonomy of some of these endemic taxa.
All plant parts, especially the seeds and latex, are often poisonous. They contain various alkaloids and glycosides, many of which are used in medicine and as insecticides
. A few succulent species (e.g.
, Stapelia gigantia N. E. Brown, Orbea pulchella (Masson) L. C.
Leach, and O. variegata (Linnaeus) Haworth are grown by specialist
collectors
in China.[1]
Genus Vincetoxicum
Rhizomatous
herbs or undershrubs, young branches often twining
. Leaves opposite, petiolate
, lamina suborbicular
to lanceolate. Flowers in axillary
few-flowered cyrnes. Corolla lobes
twisted in bud. Corona
simple
, 5-lobed or partite, lobes without internal processes, free
or fused at the base
only. Pollinia solitary in each loculus, pendulous, without a pellucid
margin
. Follicles smooth
, fusiform
.
A genus with about 10-20 species, distributed in Europe and Asia; represented in Pakistan by 6 species.[2]
Taxonomy
- Domain:
Eukaryota
(
)
- Whittaker & Margulis,1978
- eukaryotes
- Kingdom:
Plantae
(
)
- Haeckel, 1866
- Plants
- Subkingdom:
Viridaeplantae
(
)
- Cavalier-Smith, 1981
- Phylum:
Magnoliophyta
(
)
- Cronquist, Takhtajan & W. Zimmermann, 1966
- Flowering Plants
- Subphylum:
Spermatophytina
(
)
- (Auct.) Cavalier-Smith, 1998
- Infraphylum:
Angiospermae
(
)
- Auct.
- Class:
Magnoliopsida
(
)
- Brongniart, 1843
- Dicotyledons
- Subclass:
Lamiidae
(
)
- Takhtajan Ex Reveal, 1992
- Superorder:
Gentiananae
(
)
- Thorne Ex Reveal, 1992
- Order:
Gentianales
(
)
- Family:
Asclepiadaceae
(
)
- asclépiades, milkweeds
- Genus:
Vincetoxicum
(
)
- N.M. von Wolf, Gen. Pl. 130. 1776.
- Specific epithet:
magnifolium
- (Pittier) Standl.
- Botanical name: - Vincetoxicum magnifolium (Pittier) Standl.
- Specific epithet:
magnifolium
- (Pittier) Standl.
- Genus:
Vincetoxicum
(
- Family:
Asclepiadaceae
(
- Order:
Gentianales
(
- Superorder:
Gentiananae
(
- Subclass:
Lamiidae
(
- Class:
Magnoliopsida
(
- Infraphylum:
Angiospermae
(
- Subphylum:
Spermatophytina
(
- Phylum:
Magnoliophyta
(
- Subkingdom:
Viridaeplantae
(
- Kingdom:
Plantae
(
Synonyms
Gonolobus Magnifolius • Gonolobus magnifolius Pittier • Matelea Magnifolia • Matelea magnifolia (Pittier) Woodson
Similar Species
Members of the genus Vincetoxicum
ZipcodeZoo has pages for 3 species, subspecies, varieties, forms, and cultivars in this genus:
V. hirundinaria hirundinaria (White Swallow-Wort) · V. stepposum (Swallow Wort) · V. vincetoxicum (White Swallow-Wort)
More Info
- Search for Pictures: images.google.com
- Search for Scholarly Articles: Google Scholar
- Search using Scientific Name and Vernacular Names: All the Web | AltaVista Canada | AltaVista | Excite | Google | HotBot | Lycos
- Search using Specialized Databases: GenBank | Medline | Scirus | CISTI/CAL | Agricola Periodicals | Agricola Books
Further Reading
- Flora of Costa Rica. .. by Paul C. Standley. .. 18 1938 Chicago, 1937. url p. 958.
- Trees and shrubs of Mexico / By Paul C. Standley. Washington, Govt. Print. Off., 1920-1926. url p. 1188.
- Tsiang Ying & Li Ping-tao. 1977. Asclepiadaceae. Fl. Reipubl. Popularis Sin. 63: 249-575.
Notes
Contributors
Identifiers
- Biodiversity Heritage Library NamebankID: 8500168
- Globally Unique Identifier: urn:lsid:ipni.org:names:1148507-2
- Zipcode Zoo Species Identifier: 901063
Footnotes
- Bingtao Li, Michael G. Gilbert & W. Douglas Stevens "Asclepiadaceae". in Flora of China Vol. 16 Page 189. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org. [back]
- S.I. Ali "Vincetoxicum". in Flora of Pakistan Page 31. Published by Science Press (Beijing) and Missouri Botanical Garden Press. Online at EFloras.org. [back]
