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This category should contain only articles about the families of eudicots, when the articles are at the scientific name, or redirects from the scientific name in the case of monotypic taxa or articles at the English name.
The basal eudicots are a group of 13 related families of flowering plants in four orders: Buxales, Proteales, Ranunculales and Trochodendrales. [1] [a] Like the core eudicots (the rest of the eudicots), they have pollen grains with three colpi (grooves) or other derived structures, [4] and usually have flowers with four or five petals (sometimes multiples of four or five, sometimes reduced or ...
Basal eudicot is an informal name for a paraphyletic group. The core eudicots are a monophyletic group. [11] A 2010 study suggested the core eudicots can be divided into two clades, Gunnerales and a clade called Pentapetalae, comprising all the remaining core eudicots. [12] The Pentapetalae can be then divided into three clades: [citation needed]
The eudicots are the largest monophyletic group within the dicotyledons. They are distinguished from all other flowering plants by the structure of their pollen . Other dicotyledons and the monocotyledons have monosulcate pollen (or derived forms): grains with a single sulcus.
The top level category for the Eudicots — a clade of angiosperms (flowering plants) in the APG IV system (2016).; Most entries should be put in one of the subcategories of the clade (orders, families, genera and species)., but a small number of articles relating to orders, families or genera too small to have their own categories are put directly here.
The rosids are members of a large clade (monophyletic group) of flowering plants, containing about 70,000 species, [2] more than a quarter of all angiosperms. [3] The clade is divided into 16 to 20 orders, depending upon circumscription and classification. These orders, in turn, together comprise about 140 families. [4]
Firefighters responded to an average of 155 home fires ignited by Christmas trees each year from 2018 to 2022, as well as an additional 835 residential structure fires sparked by decorations other ...
Cycas is a genus of cycad, and the only genus in the family Cycadaceae with all other genera of cycad being divided between the Stangeriaceae and Zamiaceae families. Cycas circinalis, a species endemic to India, was the first cycad species to be described in western literature, and is the type species of the genus.