PAPAVERACEAE - Poppy Family

Annual or perennial herbs with milky sap

Leaves alternate, basal or cauline, much divided

Flowers solitary, bisexual, actinomorphic


Fruit a capsule with pores or valves, seeds often small and numerous.

Placentation parietal

25 genera, 200 species

The Papeveraceae is broken up into four subfamilies mostly on the basis of hair and pollen grain characteristics. In some classifications, the Fumariaceae is included in the Papaveraceae.

Economic importance: minor ornamental and opium poppies (narcotic alkaloids), Sanguinaria root.

Medicinal uses - Morphine is a component of opium and heroin is a synthetic derivative of morphine. Morphine is widely used as a painkiller but heroin is outlawed for virtually any use in the U.S.A. While doctors in Europe have the option of using heroin to relieve the extreme pain that is experienced by terminal cancer patients, U.S. doctors do not have that option. The purpose of the ban is to lower levels of heroin addiction but the ban only prevents everyone but legitimate healthcare workers and patients from obtaining it. The consumption of poppy seeds, which are often put on salads and baked goods, can result in a false positive on drug tests.

Diagnostic characteristics - herbaceous plants with highly dissected leaves, flowers showy and actinomorphic, gynoecium of 2 or more fused carpels, fruit a capsule with pores or valves.
IMAGE GALLERY
FLOWERING PLANT GATEWAY