Flowering Plants

Front Cover
Springer Science & Business Media, Jul 6, 2009 - Science - 871 pages

Armen Takhtajan is among the greatest authorities in the world on the evolution of plants. This book culminates almost sixty years of the scientist's research of the origin and classification of the flowering plants. It presents a continuation of Dr. Takhtajan’s earlier publications including “Systema Magnoliophytorum” (1987), (in Russian), and “Diversity and Classification of Flowering Plants” (1997), (in English). In his latest book, the author presents a concise and significantly revised system of plant classification (‘Takhtajan system’) based on the most recent studies in plant morphology, embryology, phytochemistry, cytology, molecular biology and palynology. Flowering plants are divided into two classes: class Magnoliopsida (or Dicotyledons) includes 8 subclasses, 126 orders, c. 440 families, almost 10,500 genera, and no less than 195,000 species; and class Liliopsida (or Monocotyledons) includes 4 subclasses, 31 orders, 120 families, more than 3,000 genera, and about 65,000 species.This book contains a detailed description of plant orders, and descriptive keys to plant families providing characteristic features of the families and their differences.

 

Contents

Phylum MAGNOLIOPHYTApdf
1
Class MAGNOLIOPSIDApdf
7
Subclass I_MAGNOLIIDAEpdf
11
Subclass II_RANUNCULIDAEpdf
69
Subclass III_HAMAMELIDIDAEpdf
101
Subclass IV_CARYOPHYLLIDAEpdf
128
Subclass V_DILLENIIDAEpdf
167
Subclass VI_ROSIDAEpdf
293
Subclass VIII_LAMIIDAEpdf
510
Class LILIOPSIDApdf
589
Subclass I_ALISMATIDAEpdf
595
Subclass II_ LILIIDAEpdf
625
Subclass III_ARECIDAEpdf
693
Subclass IV_COMMELINIDAEpdf
698
Takhtajan_Indexpdf
751
Copyright

Subclass VII_ASTERIDAEpdf
435

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About the author (2009)

The author is one of the greatest botanists of the 20th century who was awarded "The Henry Allan Gleason Award" by the New York Botanical Garden for the book "Diversity and Classification of Flowering Plants" (1997). Citation: This work, which is a complete classification of the angiosperms to the genus level, is the culmination of over sixty years of research in botany focusing on flowering plants systematics and phytogeography.

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