Apiaceae
Herbs, rarely shrubs or climbers. Lvs alternate, simple and entire to palmately or pinnately compound or lobed; stipules usually 0, sometimes present. Fls ⚥ or unisexual, actinomorphic or sometimes outer fls irregular with enlarged outer petals, arranged in axillary or terminal, simple or compound umbels, these sometimes reduced to capitate heads. Calyx adnate to the ovary, with 5 teeth, conspicuous, minute or 0. Petals 5, free, variously inflexed or notched, rarely 0. Stamens usually 5, very rarely 2-4; filaments free; anthers 2-locular. Ovary inferior, usually 2-, very rarely 1-locular; styles 2, free, thickened at the base to form the nectary (stylopodium) over the ovary; ovules solitary, pendulous. Fr. dry, usually splitting down a septum (commissure) to form 2 mericarps, these often suspended from a central axis (carpophore); mericarps usually with 5 primary ribs and 4 secondary (often undeveloped) ribs between, oil canals (vittae) usually positioned in the furrows between the ribs; ribs variously hairy, winged or spinous.
SYNOPSIS
- A. Subfam. APIOIDEAE.
- Lvs usually pinnately or ternately divided, sometimes simple; stipules 0; umbels simple or compound; fr. usually with a free carpophore, endocarp usually soft; vittae various:
- AciphyllaAegopodiumAmmiAngelicaAnisotomeAnthriscusApiumBupleurumChaerophyllumCiclospermumConiumCoriandrumDaucusFoeniculumGingidiaHeracleumLignocarpaLilaeopsisMelanoselinumOenantheOreomyrrhisPastinacaPetroselinumScandiaScandixSisonTorilis
- B. Subfam. HYDROCOTYLOIDEAE.
- Lvs often simple and entire, or palmately divided or lobed; stipules usually present; umbels usually simple, rarely compound; fr. with no free carpophore, endocarp woody; vittae 0 or in main ribs:
- ActinotusAzorellaBowlesiaCentellaHydrocotyleSchizeilema
- C. Subfam. SANICULOIDEAE.
- Lvs simple or variously divided, often spinous; stipules 0; umbel simple, often reduced to capitate heads; fr. usually with no free carpophore, often scaly, endocarp soft; vittae various:
- Eryngium
Fls and frs are important for identification, as is the form of basal and stem lvs, the presence or absence of bracts subtending umbels, and bracteoles subtending the umbellets.
Key
c. 300 genera, 3000 spp., cosmopolitan, but mainly temperate.
The Apiaceae or Umbelliferae, the alternative family name, contain a number of important vegetables (e.g. carrots, parsnips) as well as a large number of herbs (e.g. parsley, fennel, dill, coriander) and several poisonous spp. (e.g. hemlock, giant hogweed). Three subfamilies are usually recognised of which the Hydrocotyloideae are sometimes treated as a separate family Hydrocotylaceae.