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Topic: Hydrocharitales


  
  Hydrocharitales
[ Hydrangeales ] [ Hydrocharitales ] [ Hydropeltidales ]
Vernacular names of plants within the Order Hydrocharitales
For a description of the methodology followed in establishing this hierarchy see the note Nomenclature used in The Compleat Botanica.
www.crescentbloom.com /plants/Ordo/Hydrocharitales.htm   (67 words)

  
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In general Hydrocharitales are considered to be a rather primitive group, sharing many similarities with the most primitive order in the Alismatidae, the Alismatales, and in particular the family Butomaceae.
They are placed in 2 separate orders, Hydrocharitales if they have complete flowers, inferior ovaries and stipulate leaves, and Najadales if they have reduced floral parts and ligulate leaves.
Hydrocharitales is monofamilial with three genera, Enhalus, Halophila, and Thalassia.
www.fiu.edu /~seagrass/class/bot5647/maureen.htm   (3767 words)

  
 frog's-bit - HighBeam Encyclopedia
The family includes an eelgrass (genus Vallisneria), called also water celery and tape grass; the frog's-bit (Hydrocharis morsus-ramae); and the waterweeds (genus Elodea), often used in aquariums and in botanical experiments.
Frog's-bit is classified in the division Magnoliophyta, class Liliopsida, order Hydrocharitales.
Find newspaper and magazine articles plus images and maps related to "frog's-bit" at HighBeam.
www.encyclopedia.com /doc/1E1-frogsbit.html   (183 words)

  
 McGraw-Hill AccessScience: Alismatidae
The orders Alismatales, Hydrocharitales, and Najadales are closely related among themselves and have often been treated as a single order, Helobiae or Helobiales.
See also: Alismatales; Hydrocharitales; Triuridales; Triuridales; Magnoliophyta; Najadales; Plant kingdom...Full article available through subscribing libraries.
Look here for more information about this article.
www.accessscience.com /Encyclopedia/0/02/Est_022600_frameset.html?doi   (166 words)

  
 The Classification Of Liliopsids
The terms 'angiosperm' and 'phanerogam' for flowering plants are no longer in use.
Liliopsida are divided into about 19 orders: Alismatales, Arales, Arecales, Bromeliales, Commelinales, Cyclanthales, Cyperales, Eriocaulales, Hydatellales, Hydrocharitales, Juncales, Liliales, Najadales, Orchidales, Pandanales, Restionales, Triuridales, Typhales, and Zingiberales.
From any of these Neo-Latin words, which are all plural nouns, an analogous English word may be derived.
www.useless-knowledge.com /1234/may/article392.html   (1381 words)

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