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

ROSACEAE

Herbs, shrubs or trees, mostly perennial, sometimes armed. Lvs usually alternate, sometimes in basal rosettes, often toothed or lobed or compound; stipules usually present, sometimes adnate to petiole. Fls solitary or in a cyme, corymb, raceme or umbel, regular, 4-5-(6)-merous, perigynous or epigynous, sometimes intermediate, usually ⚥. Receptacle forming a flat, concave or tubular hypanthium (often called a calyx tube) bearing sepals, petals and stamens on the outer or upper margin. Epicalyx often present. Sepals free or partly adnate to ovary. Petals as many as sepals, rarely 0, imbricate. Stamens numerous, rarely reduced to 1-2; filaments usually free; anthers 2-locular, dehiscing longitudinally. Ovary superior or inferior, sometimes 1/2 inferior, with 1-several locules; carpels 1 or more, free or connate, often ± adnate to calyx tube; styles free or connate; ovules 2, rarely 1 or several in each carpel, pendulous, superposed. Fr. of 1 or more achenes, drupes, pomes, follicles, or rarely capsules, the hypanthium sometimes coloured and fleshy; seeds usually lacking endosperm.

SYNOPSIS

The synopsis is based on that of Rehder, A., Manual of Cultivated Trees and Shrubs hardy in North America (1947).

  • A. Subfam. MALOIDEAE. 
    • Armed or unarmed trees or shrubs; lvs usually simple, sometimes pinnate; stipules present; fls small to medium-sized; hypanthium deeply campanulate or cup-shaped, closed at apex, adnate to receptacle; epicalyx 0; ovary inferior; carpels 2-5, ± connate; fr. with fleshy receptacle; carpel walls leathery or papery (a pome) or bony; seeds usually 2 per carpel.
    • 1. Trib. CRATAEGEAE. 
    • 2. Trib. MALEAE. 
  • B. Subfam. PRUNOIDEAE. 
    • Armed or unarmed shrubs or trees; lvs simple; stipules present; fls usually of medium size; hypanthium deeply cup-shaped; epicalyx 0; ovary superior; carpels 1-(5); fr. a drupe; seed 1 per carpel.
    • 3. Trib. PRUNEAE: 
  • C. Subfam. ROSOIDEAE. 
    • Armed or unarmed shrubs, or herbs, rarely small trees; lvs mostly compound, sometimes simple; stipules usually present; fls small to large; hypanthium flat to conic or deeply urceolate; epicalyx often present; ovary superior or inferior; carpels free, usually many and often clustered on a carpophore; fr. of achenes sometimes embedded in a fleshy receptacle, or drupelets, always indehiscent; seeds 1-2 per carpel.
    • 4. Trib. DRYADEAE. 
      • Perennial unarmed herbs or shrubs; lvs simple and entire, or lobed to pinnatisect, pinnate or palmate, stipulate; epicalyx usually present, rarely 0; carpels 1-numerous, free, on a flat to conic receptacle, sometimes with a persistent hooked style at fruiting; head of usually dry, very rarely fleshy achenes exposed on receptacle or very rarely enclosed by calyx:
      • Geum
    • 5. Trib. POTENTILLEAE. 
      • Perennial unarmed herbs or sometimes shrubs; lvs usually pinnate, sometimes palmate or ternate, stipulate; epicalyx present or 0; carpels 1-numerous, free, on a convex to conic receptacle; fr. a head of achenes, sometimes these at least partly embedded in a swollen fleshy receptacle:
      • DuchesneaFragariaPotentilla
    • 6. Trib. POTERIEAE. 
      • Armed or unarmed shrubs, trees or perennial herbs, rarely annual; lvs simple and entire, or lobed to deeply divided, pinnate or palmate, stipulate; epicalyx usually present, sometimes 0; carpels 1-2-(4), free, sometimes with a persistent hooked style at fruiting; fr. of achenes enclosed in usually dry and often hard or rarely fleshy calyx:
      • AcaenaAlchemillaAphanesSanguisorba
    • 7. Trib. ROSEAE. 
      • Shrubs, usually prickly, often lianoid; lvs usually pinnate, very rarely simple, usually stipulate, very rarely exstipulate; epicalyx 0; carpels numerous, free, enclosed in a ± urceolate to globose receptacle; fr. a hip consisting of the large fleshy receptacle containing several to many bony achenes:
      • Rosa
    • 8. Trib. RUBIEAE. 
      • Shrubs, usually prickly and lianoid or with creeping stems; lvs usually palmate or pinnate, sometimes simple, stipulate; epicalyx 0; carpels few to many, free, on a convex receptacle; fr. usually a collection of fleshy drupelets, rarely dry:
      • Rubus
    • 9. ULMARIEAE. 
      • Perennial unarmed herbs; lvs pinnate, or palmately lobed, stipulate; epicalyx 0; carpels 5-15, free, in 1 whorl on a flat to convex receptacle; fr. a compact head of achenes:
      • Filipendula
  • D. Subfam. SPIRAEOIDEAE. 
    • Unarmed shrubs, sometimes herbs, rarely trees; lvs simple or compound; stipules present or 0; fls usually small; hypanthium saucer- or cup-shaped; epicalyx 0; ovary superior; carpels usually 5, free or connate; fr. of 1-5 follicles, rarely achenial. Seeds several per follicle.
    • 10. Trib. GILLENIEAE. 
      • Shrubs, subshrubs, occasionally small trees or perennial herbs; lvs imparipinnate, occasionally 3-foliolate, stipulate; ovules 2-8; carpels 2-5, partly free, opening by ventral suture only; seeds wingless:
      • Sorbaria
    • 11. Trib. NEILLIEAE. 
      • Shrubs; lvs simple, usually lobed, stipulate; ovules > 10; carpels 1-5, slightly united at base, opening by dorsal and ventral sutures or by ventral suture only; seed wingless:
      • Physocarpus
    • 12. Trib. QUILLAJEAE. 
      • Shrubs or small to medium-sized trees; lvs simple; stipules present or 0; ovules 2; carpels (2)-5, free or united, opening by ventral suture; seed winged or apiculate:
      • Exochorda
    • 13. Trib. SPIRAEAE. 
      • Shrubs or subshrubs with simple lvs or sometimes perennial herbs with compound lvs; stipules 0; ovules (2)-10; carpels (2)-5-(8), free or almost so, opening by ventral suture and dorsally at the top; seed wingless:
      • Spiraea

Key

1
Trees, shrubs or woody lianes
2
Herbs, sometimes with a woody stock
26
2
Lvs pinnate or palmate
3
Lvs simple
6
3
Ovary superior; carpels and fr. exposed on the hypanthium
4
Ovary inferior or almost so; carpels enclosed by the hypanthium
5
4
Plant usually armed; fr. a head of fleshy drupelets
Plant not armed; fr. a head of dry follicles
5
Thorny shrubs or lianes (very rarely not armed); ovary superior, with numerous carpels, free but almost enclosed in the receptacle; fr. a hip with many achenes
Trees or sometimes shrubs, not armed; ovary inferior, with 2-5 carpels, adnate to hypanthium and completely enclosed in receptacle; fr. a pome with 1-2 seeds in each locule
6
Fr. a dry follicle or follicular capsule; stipules 0 or caducous
7
Fr. fleshy or mealy; stipules present, persistent or caducous
9
7
Fr. a 5-angled, deeply lobed woody capsule; fls > 3 cm diam.
Fr. follicular with carpels free, papery or coriaceous; fls < 1.5 cm diam.
8
8
Stipules 0; frs not inflated, dehiscent along ventral suture
Stipules present but caducous; frs ± inflated, dehiscent down ventral and dorsal sutures
9
Fr. an aggregate of fleshy drupelets; lianes and shrubs armed with prickles
Fr. a somewhat fleshy or mealy pome (sometimes berry-like) or drupe; mostly shrubs and trees, not armed or with scattered spines
10
10
Fr. a fleshy drupe; carpel 1, free from hypanthium
Fr. a fleshy or mealy pome; carpels > 1, ± adnate to the hypanthium
11
11
Fls solitary
12
Fls 2-many in infls
13
12
Evergreen shrubs; fr. < 10 mm diam., red; fl. < 15 mm diam.; carpel walls woody in fr.
Deciduous shrubs or small trees; fr. > 30 mm diam., yellow; fl. > 25 mm diam.; carpel walls papery or leathery in fr.
13
At least some lvs lobed
14
Lvs not lobed
15
14
Fls in simple corymbs; plant usually armed
Fls in compound corymbs or panicles; plant not armed
15
Lf margin entire or finely serrulate
16
Lf margin prominently serrate, dentate or crenate
18
16
Ovary or carpel walls woody at maturity; fr. of 1-5 nutlets
Ovary or carpel walls coriaceous or papery at maturity; fr. a 1-5-celled pome
17
17
Fls in corymbs; calyx persistent; fr. yellow to crimson
Fls in racemes or panicles; calyx deciduous; fr. black or nearly so
18
Infl. a raceme or compound corymb or panicle with few to many fls, rarely fls solitary
19
Infl. a few-flowered fasciculate or umbel-like cluster
24
19
Sepals deciduous at fruiting
Sepals persistent at fruiting
20
20
Infl. a panicle; fr. > 20 mm diam.; lvs up to 250 mm long
Infl. a compound corymb or raceme; fr. < 20 mm diam.; lvs < 120 mm long
21
21
Evergreen, medium-sized to large, dense shrubs, armed at least on vegetative shoots towards base
Deciduous, small trees or large shrubs, generally with fairly open habit, armed or not armed
22
22
Carpels woody at fruiting; fr. with 1-5 nutlets
Carpels with leathery or papery walls at fruiting; fr. with 1-several seeds per carpel cell
23
23
Fls in compound corymbs
Fls in simple racemes, rarely solitary
24
Fr. with many seeds per locule; fls in fascicles
Fr. with 2 seeds per locule; fls in short umbel-like racemes or clusters
25
25
Flesh of fr. usually with no gritty stone cells, occasionally with stone cells; fr. broadly ovoid, ovoid-oblong, subglobose or globose, never widest near apex; styles connate at base
Flesh of fr. with gritty stone cells; fr. usually turbinate or nearly so, sometimes almost globose; styles free to base
26
Petals 0
27
Petals 4 or more
30
27
Lvs palmatifid or 3-partite
28
Lvs pinnate
29
28
Plant perennial; stamens 4-5; fls in small cymes arranged in large panicles
Plant annual; stamens 1-(2); fls in small cymes arranged in small glomerules scarcely exceeding stipules
29
Stamens 2-5; hypanthium usually spiny
Stamens numerous; hypanthium lacking spines
30
Epicalyx 0; sepals 5-6
31
Epicalyx with 4-5 segments; sepals (4)-5
32
31
Lvs pinnate, with small leaflets between larger ones; fr. an aggregate of achenes; plant not armed
Lvs simple or palmate, or if pinnate then with ± equal leaflets; fr. an aggregate of drupelets; plant usually armed with prickles
32
Receptacle not swollen at fruiting
33
Receptacle swollen at fruiting and fleshy or spongy
34
33
Styles completely deciduous at fruiting
Styles persistent at least in part at fruiting
34
Petals yellow; fr. dryish to semi-fleshy and ± sour; epicalyx toothed
Petals white; fr. fleshy and sweet; epicalyx usually entire

c. 120 genera, c. 3500 spp., worldwide, most numerous in N. temperate regions.

For this family authorship is indicated for each genus.

The family, as defined here, includes many large and important genera and introduced members are often abundant and conspicuous both as naturalised and cultivated plants. Many spp. long persist as relics of cultivation, and in and around old settlements throughout N.Z. members of the Rosaceae are almost always prominent.

Many genera are economically important with most of the fruit trees of temperate regions belonging to this family. Hundreds of spp. and cvs are grown as ornamentals, particularly in the genera Rosa, Prunus, Crataegus, Cotoneaster, Spiraea, Malus and Sorbus. Some members of the family are serious agricultural weeds, especially spp. of the Rubus fruticosus agg.

The family can be divided into 5 clear-cut subfamilies; the 4 which are wild in N.Z. are Spiraeoideae, Rosoideae and Prunoideae (with basic chromosome numbers of 7, 8 or 9), and Maloideae (with a basic chromosome number of 17). The other subfamily does not occur in N.Z. Frs of Rosaceae are very diverse and provide important characters for subdividing the family. Fleshy frs mostly belong to the Maloideae (pomes), Prunoideae (drupes) and Rosoideae (aggregates of fleshy drupelets, or achenes with a fleshy receptacle).

The synopsis below includes 3 genera not known to be truly wild in N.Z., 2 of which are very common in cultivation and long persist in abandoned gardens. Kerria japonica (L.) DC. is a deciduous shrub with erect green stems and single or double yellow fls which often forms suckering thickets. Few settled parts of N.Z. are without individual plants or hedges of the evergreen Photinia glabra (Thunb.) Maxim. and its hybrid cvs, which are mainly grown for the rather large glossy lvs which change from shades of red to dark green as they mature. The panicles of small white fls are rarely followed by the small black berries in N.Z. Mespilus germanica L., medlar, is only seen as a rather uncommon relic of cultivation. It is a small, deciduous tree with large, solitary, white fls and a large, brown, depressed-globose pome-like fr.

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