MAGNOLIACEAE - Magnolia Family

 

Magnolia grandiflora

Trees or shrubs

Leaves alternate, pinnately veined, simple stipules enclosing bud

Flowers solitary, actinomorphic, CA and CO not differentiated, parts referred to as tepals, perianth in 3 or more series

Stamens spirally arranged, ribbon-like

Pistils unilocular and spirally arranged
Fruit a follicle or samara aggregated into a conelike structure

Seed with abundant endosperm, often suspended by a thread-like funiculus

12 genera, 230 species

The Magnoliaceae is divided into two subfamilies:

Magnolioideae (leaves entire, fruit not a samara)

Liriodendroideae (leaves 2-10 lobed, fruit a samara

Above are the twig, leaf, flower, stamen and fruit (aggregate of samaras) from Liriodendron tulipifera, a large tree found from the Atlantic coast to the eastern portion of the Midwest in the U.S.A. Notice the lobed leaf, undifferentiated stamen, and fruit type.

Magnolia-like flowers were once thought to be primitive (similar to the flowers of original angisperms) but his idea is no loner in favor due to recent fossil finds

Economic importance - ornamentals, timber

Medicinal uses - Bark, leaf, and fruit teas have been used to treat fevers, rheumatism, and stomach ailments.

Diagnostic characteristics - woody, many unfused floral parts, stamens undifferentiated, fruit an aggregate of follicles or achenes.


IMAGE GALLERY
FLOWERING PLANT GATEWAY