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Burseraceae

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The stamen ( pl. : stamina or stamens ) is a part consisting of the male reproductive organs of a flower. Collectively, the stamens form the androecium .

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58-508: See text The Burseraceae are a moderate-sized family of 17-19 genera and about 540 species of woody flowering plants . The actual numbers given in taxonomic sources differ according to taxonomic revision at the time of writing. The Burseraceae are also known as the torchwood family, the frankincense and myrrh family, or simply the incense tree family . The family includes both trees and shrubs ; its species are native to tropical regions of Africa , Asia , Australasia , and

116-539: A characteristic nectar disk and imbricate petals and sepals. Some of these characteristics also occur in the Rosales . However, the Sapindales and Rutales may actually form a complex, since many families "jump" between them. Indeed, rbc L sequence studies seem to indicate that a sapindalean/rutalean complex exists and may better represent the relationships of the families than the separate orders would. A study based on

174-685: A common representative of the family in the United States, especially in Florida ( B. simaruba ) and the Southwest ( B. odorata, B. microphylla ). Naked Indian (also known as gumbo limbo), or Bursera simaruba , in particular, is found in Florida , Mexico, the Caribbean, Venezuela , and Brazil . The tree is also named the ‘tourist tree’ for its very distinctive flaking red bark; apparently,

232-409: A few species of Trithuria (family Hydatellaceae ) are exceptional in that their gynoecia surround their androecia. Depending on the species of plant, some or all of the stamens in a flower may be attached to the petals or to the floral axis . They also may be free-standing or fused to one another in many different ways, including fusion of some but not all stamens. The filaments may be fused and

290-554: A lack of widespread consensus within the scientific community for extended periods. The continual publication of new data and diverse opinions plays a crucial role in facilitating adjustments and ultimately reaching a consensus over time. The naming of families is codified by various international bodies using the following suffixes: The taxonomic term familia was first used by French botanist Pierre Magnol in his Prodromus historiae generalis plantarum, in quo familiae plantarum per tabulas disponuntur (1689) where he called

348-501: A single locule ) as in Canna species or as many as 3,482 stamens which have been counted in the saguaro ( Carnegiea gigantea ). The androecium in various species of plants forms a great variety of patterns, some of them highly complex. It generally surrounds the gynoecium and is surrounded by the perianth . A few members of the family Triuridaceae , particularly Lacandonia schismatica and Lacandonia brasiliana , along with

406-684: A source of food for birds. Frankincense, or olibanum, ( Boswellia carterii ) and myrrh ( Commiphora abyssinica ) have long been valued for the aromatic resins they produce. These resins are extracted via tapping, or cutting of the bark to make it release sap. The liquid sap hardens and is gathered, sold as is or further processed and mixed with spices, seeds, and roots to make various forms of incense. Both species are native to parts of Northeast Africa ( Somalia , frankincense; Somalia and Ethiopia , myrrh) and Arabia ( Oman and Yemen , frankincense), but their distribution and use have been extended beyond these regions to India and China. The best frankincense

464-735: A specific region of the world, although this is not obligatory. For example, members of the tribe Protieae are generally found in South America, those of the Bursereae are found in Africa and Mesoamerica , while members of the Canarieae are found in Malesia. However, each tribe has a representative genus present in all the tropical regions: Dacryodes (Canarieae), Protium (Protieae), and Commiphora (Bursereae). The Burseraceae are found in

522-583: A variety of habitats, including hot, dry desert and savannah , as well as in coastal mangrove forest and rain forest habitats. One study found that the family originated in North America during the Paleocene (about 65 Mya), when the earliest fossils of the Sapindales are found. During the Early to Middle Eocene (about 53 Mya), family members dispersed to eastern Laurasia (i.e. Europe and Asia) via

580-413: A variety of other wood-based products; the utility of the wood is comparable to that of mahogany and birch . In addition, species like Canarium littorale , Dacryodes costata , Santiria laevigata , and Santiria tomentosa from Malaysia, as well as Aucoumea klaineana and Canarium schweinfurthii from Africa, also produce valuable wood for construction projects and carpentry. Several species in

638-711: Is basal to the remaining Burseraceae. These results may indicate that the family originated in Mexico. The next divergence was in the Early Eocene when the Burserinae (i.e. Commiphora ) diverged and emigrated from North America into Africa, Madagascar , and India. Commiphora dispersed throughout Africa during the Middle Eocene (about 44 Mya) and from Africa to Madagascar during the Oligocene (about 30 Mya) via

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696-458: Is called appendiculate , e.g. Nerium odorum and some other species of Apocynaceae . In Nerium , the appendages are united as a staminal corona. A column formed from the fusion of multiple filaments is known as an androphore . Stamens can be connate (fused or joined in the same whorl) as follows: Anther shapes are variously described by terms such as linear , rounded , sagittate , sinuous , or reniform . The anther can be attached to

754-464: Is called a staminate flower , or (inaccurately) a male flower. A flower with a functional pistil but no functional stamens is called a pistillate flower , or (inaccurately) a female flower. An abortive or rudimentary stamen is called a staminodium or staminode , such as in Scrophularia nodosa . The carpels and stamens of orchids are fused into a column . The top part of the column

812-499: Is commonly referred to as the "walnut family". The delineation of what constitutes a family— or whether a described family should be acknowledged— is established and decided upon by active taxonomists . There are not strict regulations for outlining or acknowledging a family, yet in the realm of plants, these classifications often rely on both the vegetative and reproductive characteristics of plant species. Taxonomists frequently hold varying perspectives on these descriptions, leading to

870-410: Is formed by the anther, which is covered by an anther cap . Stamens can also be adnate (fused or joined from more than one whorl): They can have different lengths from each other: or respective to the rest of the flower ( perianth ): They may be arranged in one of two different patterns: They may be arranged, with respect to the petals : Where the connective is very small, or imperceptible,

928-702: Is grown in Oman and the incense is widely used in worship in India. The ancient Egyptians prized frankincense for the resin they used to make the characteristic dark eyeliner and myrrh as an embalming agent for deceased pharaohs . At that time, myrrh was worth more than gold. In modern times resins from these trees are used in Chinese herbal medicine and Indian Ayurvedic medicine to treat several ailments. Pills containing small doses of frankincense and other ingredients are valued in oriental medicine for promoting blood flow and

986-485: Is one of the eight major hierarchical taxonomic ranks in Linnaean taxonomy . It is classified between order and genus . A family may be divided into subfamilies , which are intermediate ranks between the ranks of family and genus. The official family names are Latin in origin; however, popular names are often used: for example, walnut trees and hickory trees belong to the family Juglandaceae , but that family

1044-867: Is usually lacking in the embryo. Some discrepancy exists in the literature about the size of the Burseraceae. Records say that the family has 17 to 18 genera and 500 to 540 to 726 species. Other authors cite different numbers: 16–20 genera and 600 species; 20 genera and 500–600 species; According to a pollen studies and molecular data, the family is split into three tribes : the Protieae, Bursereae, and Canarieae. The Protieae are composed of Protium (147 species and largest in this tribe), Crepidospermum, Garuga , and Tetragastris . The Bursereae, which are further split into subtribes Boswelliinae and Burserinae, contain Commiphora (nearly 200 species and largest in

1102-475: The Genera Plantarum of George Bentham and Joseph Dalton Hooker this word ordo was used for what now is given the rank of family. Families serve as valuable units for evolutionary, paleontological, and genetic studies due to their relatively greater stability compared to lower taxonomic levels like genera and species. Anther A stamen typically consists of a stalk called

1160-624: The Americas . Because of taxonomic revision, as the family size (in terms of genera and species) differs according to the time period of study; so, too, does the family's higher- level relationships, including order . Burseraceae is a genetically-supported monophyletic group since APG III and is frequently cited within the Sapindales . It is recognized as a sister group to the Anacardiaceae . The Burseraceae are characterized by

1218-675: The Boreotropical Land Bridge and the continents in the Southern Hemisphere, which is now the area of the greatest generic diversity of this family. More specifically, the earliest diverging genus was Beiselia (of the Bursereae subtribe Boswelliinae) in either North America, Mexico, or the Caribbean in the Paleocene. Similar results from other studies find that Beiselia mexicana , a native of Mexico,

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1276-617: The Tethys seaway in the Late Eocene (about 37 Mya), but then made its way back to South America via long-distance dispersal. By the late Oligocene (about 23Mya), all three Burseraceae tribes were extant and dispersed throughout the Northern Hemisphere. The mechanism of seed dispersal via animal link vectors ( endozoochoric dispersal) may explain how most Burseraceae were able to expand their range so efficiently across

1334-407: The chloroplast -encoded gene rbc L reconstructed cladograms that include families within both the Sapindales and Rutales. One such cladogram indicated that the Sapindales are robust and that the Burseraceae (and Anacardiaceae) are within a single clade of their own. This grouping seems to make sense, as both the Burseraceae and Anacardiaceae have secretory canals in the phloem and resin canals in

1392-401: The filament and an anther which contains microsporangia . Most commonly anthers are two-lobed (each lobe is termed a locule ) and are attached to the filament either at the base or in the middle area of the anther. The sterile tissue between the lobes is called the connective , an extension of the filament containing conducting strands. It can be seen as an extension on the dorsal side of

1450-488: The heath family ( Ericaceae ), or by valves, as in the barberry family ( Berberidaceae ). In some plants, notably members of Orchidaceae and Asclepiadoideae , the pollen remains in masses called pollinia , which are adapted to attach to particular pollinating agents such as birds or insects. More commonly, mature pollen grains separate and are dispensed by wind or water, pollinating insects, birds or other pollination vectors. Pollen of angiosperms must be transported to

1508-432: The malvids of the rosid clade within the eudicotyledons . The order contains nine to 15 families, 460 genera, and from 5,400 to 5,670 to 5,800 species. The currently recognized families include Aceraceae, Anacardiaceae, Burseraceae, Hippocastanaceae, Julianaceae, Meliaceae, Rutaceae, Sapindaceae, and Simaroubaceae. The Sapindales are a clade supported by DNA-based analyses on rbc L, atp B, and 18S sequences. Within

1566-443: The stigma , the receptive surface of the carpel , of a compatible flower, for successful pollination to occur. After arriving, the pollen grain (an immature microgametophyte) typically completes its development. It may grow a pollen tube and undergo mitosis to produce two sperm nuclei. In the typical flower (that is, in the majority of flowering plant species) each flower has both carpels and stamens . In some species, however,

1624-437: The tapetum and initially contains diploid pollen mother cells. These undergo meiosis to form haploid spores. The spores may remain attached to each other in a tetrad or separate after meiosis. Each microspore then divides mitotically to form an immature microgametophyte called a pollen grain . The pollen is eventually released when the anther forms openings ( dehisces ). These may consist of longitudinal slits, pores, as in

1682-481: The Anacardiaceae. The gumbo limbo grows quickly and can be used to make a living fence especially out of cut limbs that are placed straight into the ground or for restoration projects as a pioneer species . The tree is highly tolerant of high-intensity wind such as hurricane-force winds, so is planted in areas where hurricanes occur frequently, such as Florida and the Caribbean. The seeds of this species are also

1740-521: The Burseraceae typify the economic and ethnobotanic significance of the family. First, Dacryodes excelsa of the Canarieae is an important old-growth species found in the Caribbean. Second, Bursera simaruba of the Burserinae is a fast-growing ornamental that is one of a few representatives of the primarily tropical family in the United States. Finally, the namesakes of the family Boswellia carterii (frankincense) and Commiphora abyssinica (myrrh) are important economically and medicinally in several parts of

1798-511: The Caribbean. The seeds of the tree are a source of food for birds. Like all members, the tree releases sap from the bark when wounded. The clear sap oozes from the tree and hardens to a white, aromatic waxy resin that can be used to make candles and incense. Before the arrival of the Spaniards to Puerto Rico, the native Taínos used the resin to make torches. The wood itself is useful for constructing housing, furniture, boxes, small boats, and

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1856-702: The Mozambique Channel Land Bridge; the spread to India was more recent (about 5 Mya). The Canarieae and Boswelliinae (subtribes of Bursereae) dispersed from western Laurasia and spread eastward during the Eocene ; fossils of Canarium, for example, from the Czech Republic date to the Late Oligocene (23 Mya). Finally, the Protieae originated in North America like the rest of the family, then migrated to Africa and Asia through

1914-493: The Protieae are described as having a two- to five-parted drupe with either ‘free or adhering parts’ which are ‘not fused in the endocarp’; The Bursereae are described as having a drupe with parts that are fused in the endocarp , but an exocarp with dehiscing valves; and the Canarieae as simply having a drupe with parts that are fused in the endocarp. This is a list of the 19 genera of the Burseraceae with placement in three tribes (and subtribes where applicable): According to

1972-669: The Sapindaceae-Aceraceae-Hippocastanaceae clade. The Rutaceae-Meliaceae-Simaroubaceae clade is sister to the Burseraceae-Anacardiaceae and Sapindaceae-Aceraceae-Hippocastanaceae clade. The rbc L technique is supported and considered acceptable until such time as other analytical methods become better developed. The Burseraceae are distributed throughout the world and primarily in the tropics, especially Malesia , Africa, and Central and South America. The three tribes can be linked to

2030-526: The Sapindales are two clades that contain gum and resin: the Rutaceae-Meliaceae-Simaroubaceae clade and the Burseraceae-Anacardiaceae clade. The Burseraceae are thus not the only family in the Sapindales with this characteristic. The synapomorphies of the clade include pinnately compound alternately- or spirally-arranged leaves that may be palmately compound, trifoliate, or unifoliate, and small four- or five-merous flowers having

2088-425: The anther lobes are close together, and the connective is referred to as discrete , e.g. Euphorbia pp., Adhatoda zeylanica . Where the connective separates the anther lobes, it is called divaricate , e.g. Tilia , Justicia gendarussa . The connective may also be a long and stalk-like, crosswise on the filament, this is a distractile connective, e.g. Salvia . The connective may also bear appendages, and

2146-526: The anther. A pollen grain develops from a microspore in the microsporangium and contains the male gametophyte . The size of anthers differs greatly, from a tiny fraction of a millimeter in Wolfia spp up to five inches (13 centimeters) in Canna iridiflora and Strelitzia nicolai . The stamens in a flower are collectively called the androecium . The androecium can consist of as few as one-half stamen (i.e.

2204-419: The anthers free, or the filaments free and the anthers fused. Rather than there being two locules, one locule of a stamen may fail to develop, or alternatively the two locules may merge late in development to give a single locule. Extreme cases of stamen fusion occur in some species of Cyclanthera in the family Cucurbitaceae and in section Cyclanthera of genus Phyllanthus (family Euphorbiaceae ) where

2262-540: The family as a rank intermediate between order and genus was introduced by Pierre André Latreille in his Précis des caractères génériques des insectes, disposés dans un ordre naturel (1796). He used families (some of them were not named) in some but not in all his orders of "insects" (which then included all arthropods ). In nineteenth-century works such as the Prodromus of Augustin Pyramus de Candolle and

2320-604: The family was moved to the Rutales . Finally, in the late 20th century, the family was (and today still is) located within the Sapindales. Families that are consistently found in the same order as the Burseraceae (except when in the Burserales) include the Rutaceae , Meliaceae , and Simaroubaceae . Only in recent studies were the Burseraceae and the Anacardiaceae seen as sister groups. The Sapindales are contained within

2378-409: The family), Aucoumea, Beiselia, Boswellia, Bursera, and Triomma . Finally, the Canarieae are composed of Canarium (75 species and largest in this tribe), Dacryodes, Haplolobus, Pseudodacryodes, Rosselia, Santiria, Scutinanthe , and Trattinnickia . The morphology of the fruit, which is a drupe, helps to distinguish between the three tribes. Though the groupings have slightly changed since the 1990s,

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2436-400: The flowers are unisexual with only carpels or stamens. ( monoecious = both types of flowers found on the same plant; dioecious = the two types of flower found only on different plants). A flower with only stamens is called androecious . A flower with only carpels is called gynoecious . A pistil consists of one or more carpels. A flower with functional stamens but no functional pistil

2494-476: The generally non- allergenic resin they produce in virtually all plant tissue and their distinctive smooth, yet flaking, aromatic bark. The origins of the family can be traced to the Paleocene (about 65 Mya) when Beiselia mexicana first diverged in Mexico . The subsequent divergences in the family lineage and migration of species in the Eocene (53 Mya) out of North America have led to the current distribution of

2552-489: The genus Canarium are used as edible fruits (for example, Canarium album , the Chinese olive) and nuts (pili nuts, Canarium ovatum ). Species in the genus Bursera , especially the so-called elephant tree , grow primarily in Mexico, where their secretions are a raw material in making varnish . The Maya also used a Bursera sp. to make incense . However, the Bursera may also be considered an ornamental genus and

2610-895: The globe. Beiselia, Boswellia , and Triomma have dry fruits better suited for wind dispersal, but most Burseraceae have fleshy, edible fruit that is eaten by many animal dispersers. The seeds may provide a high reward in fat (24–73%) and protein (2.7–25.9%) if digested, but many animals eat just the fleshy part of the fruit and either discard the endocarp right away or excrete it some time later. Some known Burseraceae fruit consumers include hornbills ( Buceros bicornis, Ceratogyma atrata, C. cylindricus, Penelopides panini ), oilbirds ( Steatnoris caripensis ), fruit pigeons, warblers, vireos, orioles, flycatchers, tanagers, woodpeckers, loeries , primates ( Cercopithecus spp., Lophocebus albigena ), lemurs ( Varecia variegate subsp. variegate ), and sun bears ( Helarctos malayanus ). The fruits may also have been water dispersed. Several representative species within

2668-506: The leaf base is swollen and may be concave adaxially. The family members tend to be without stipules . The determinate, axillary inflorescences carry small, radial, unisexual flowers. The plants tend to be dioecious . The flowers may have four or five faintly connate but imbricate sepals with an equal number of distinct, imbricate petals . Also, the stamens, that may contain nectar discs , have distinct glabrous filaments that occur in one or two whorls and in numbers equaling or twice

2726-435: The leaves, and are unique in the Sapindales for having biflavones in the leaf tissue. However, the two families have several distinguishing characteristics. The resin of the Burseraceae is nonallergenic and two ovules per carpel occur, whereas the resin of the Anacardiaceae can be allergenic or poisonous and one ovule per carpel is found. The Burseraceae-Anacardiaceae clade is sister to a robust cluster of three other families,

2784-545: The literature, the Burseraceae have not been lumped with other families nor split up into several others. However, they have "jumped" orders several times. For example, in the early 19th century, the family seems to have been placed in the Burserales , with the Anacardiaceae and Podoaceae . In the mid-19th century and early 20th century, the family was placed in the Geraniales . Then, by the mid- and late-20th century,

2842-467: The most well known resins, frankincense and myrrh, have an odor that is distinct from almonds, smelling like incense. The leaves are generally alternate, spiral, and odd-pinnately compound with opposite, frequently long-petiolulate, entire to serrate, pinnately veined leaflets whose symmetry is distinctive in some genera. However, some members are known to have trifoliate or unifoliate leaves. The leaf and leaflet stalks and axis may be brown and scurfy, while

2900-472: The movement of the qi (‘life force’ or ‘spiritual energy’). and myrrh is similarly claimed to promote blood flow, stimulate the stomach and digestion, and to be useful in treating diabetes, menopause, uterine tumors, amenorrhoea , and dysmenorrhea . Both frankincense (containing triterpene acids) and myrrh are used to relieve pain and inflammation as in arthritis and asthma. Family (biology) Family ( Latin : familia , pl. : familiae )

2958-437: The number of petals; the tricolporate pollen is contained within two locules of the anthers that open longitudinally along slits. The gynoecium contains 3–5 connate carpels , one style , and one stigma that is head-like to lobed. Each locule of the superior ovary has two ovules with axile placentation that are anatropous to campylotropous. The one- to five-pitted fruit is a drupe that opens at maturity. The endosperm

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3016-499: The same in the Eastern Hemisphere. The Burseraceae trees or shrubs are characterized by resins (having triterpenoids and ethereal oils) that are present within the plant tissue from the vertical resin canals and ducts in the bark to the leaf veins. In fact, the synapomorphy of the Burseraceae is the smooth yet peeling or flaking aromatic bark. The clear, nonallergenic resins may smell like almonds, but at least

3074-575: The seventy-six groups of plants he recognised in his tables families ( familiae ). The concept of rank at that time was not yet settled, and in the preface to the Prodromus Magnol spoke of uniting his families into larger genera , which is far from how the term is used today. In his work Philosophia Botanica published in 1751, Carl Linnaeus employed the term familia to categorize significant plant groups such as trees , herbs , ferns , palms , and so on. Notably, he restricted

3132-532: The species being primarily associated with the tropics. Though the family likely originated in North America, the greatest genetic diversity presently is found in the Southern Hemisphere. Tabonuco ( Dacryodes excelsa ) and gumbo limbo ( Bursera simaruba ) represent the economic, ethnobotanical, and ecological significance of the Burseraceae in the Western Hemisphere, while frankincense ( Boswellia sacra ) and myrrh ( Commiphora myrrha ) represent

3190-427: The stamens form a ring around the gynoecium, with a single locule. Plants having a single stamen are referred to as "monandrous." A typical anther contains four microsporangia. The microsporangia form sacs or pockets ( locules ) in the anther (anther sacs or pollen sacs). The two separate locules on each side of an anther may fuse into a single locule. Each microsporangium is lined with a nutritive tissue layer called

3248-561: The tree occurs in tropical areas where many white tourists go on vacation. The resin from this tree can be used to make varnish and turpentine. In addition, the resin may also be used similarly to tiger balm (containing Cinnamomum camphora of the Lauraceae ) to relieve sprains and muscle aches. The leaves are used to brew a tea to relieve inflammation. The bark serves as an antidote to skin irritation caused by Metopium toxiferum (also known as poisonwood, Florida poison tree, and hog gum) of

3306-549: The use of this term solely within the book's morphological section, where he delved into discussions regarding the vegetative and generative aspects of plants. Subsequently, in French botanical publications, from Michel Adanson 's Familles naturelles des plantes (1763) and until the end of the 19th century, the word famille was used as a French equivalent of the Latin ordo (or ordo naturalis ). In zoology ,

3364-467: The world. Though this is a small subset of the large number of potentially important species, these four members exemplify the wide use and importance of the Burseraceae. The latter three are frequently cited in the literature for their renowned importance. Commonly known as tabonuco (or gommier, also candlewood), Dacryodes excelsa is a large, dominant tree found in Puerto Rico and other parts of

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