Volume IV (1988) - Flora of New Zealand Naturalised Pteridophytes, Gymnosperms, Dicotyledons
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Asclepiadaceae

ASCLEPIADACEAE

Herbs, shrubs or climbers, rarely trees or dwarf succulents, usually with milky latex. Lvs usually opposite, less commonly verticillate, simple, exstipulate, sometimes reduced to scales. Fls in axillary or terminal cymes or cymose umbels, ⚥, actinomorphic, 5-merous. Calyx deeply lobed; lobes imbricate or valvate. Corolla gamopetalous; lobes contorted or valvate in bud. Corona usually present, simple or of separate scales, in a single or double row. Anthers united in a ring and usually adnate to stigma, forming a gynostegium. Pollen usually aggregated in pollinia, sometimes in tetrads, attached to translators (organs for transferring pollen, usually arm-like processes). Disc 0. Ovary superior. Carpels 2, free below, united at the disc-like stigma. Fr. a pair of follicles, often only one developing. Seeds with apical coma of long silky hairs.

Key

1
Lianes; corolla campanulate, less commonly salverform
Herbs or small shrubs, erect or suberect; corolla rotate
2
2
Corolla segments ± deflexed at anthesis; corona with horn-like appendage; follicles inflated, usually broadly ovoid
Corolla segments patent at anthesis; corona lacking horn-like appendage; follicles not inflated, fusiform to narrowly ovoid

c. 130 genera, 2000 spp., mostly tropical and sub-tropical.

The family is closely related to the Apocynaceae, especially to advanced members. The most commonly cultivated spp. of Asclepiadaceae, in addition to those mentioned below, belong to the succulent genera Ceropegia L., Hoya R. Br. and Stephanotis Thouars. The spp. concerned are subtropical or tropical and include some of our commonest indoor or glasshouse climbers and trailers.

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