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ERICACEAE , in botany, a naturalSee also: order of See also: plants belonging
to the higher or gamopetalous division of See also: Dicotyledons
.
They
are woody plants, sometimes with a slender creeping See also: stem as
in See also: bilberry, Vaccinium (fig
.
1), or See also: Andromeda (fig
.
2), or See also: form-
See also: ing low bushes as in
the heaths, or larger,
sometimes becoming
See also: tree-like, as in See also: species
of See also: Rhododendron
.
The leaves are alter-
nate, opposite or
whorled in arrange-
ment, and in their
form and structure
show well - marked
adaptation for See also: life
in dry or exposed
situations
.
Thus in
the true. heaths they
are needle-like, with
the margins often
rolled back to form
a groove or an almost
closed chamber on
the under See also: side
.
In
others such as Rhodo-
dendron or Arbutus
they are often
leathery and ever-
See also: green, the strongly
cuticularized upper See also: surface protecting a See also: water-storing tissue
situated above the green layers of the leaf
.
The See also: flowers are
sometimes solitary and axillary or terminal as in Andromeda,
but are generally arranged in racemose inflorescences at the end
of the branches as in Arbutus and Rhododendron, or on small
lateral shoots as in Erica
.
They are hermaphrodite and generally
See also: regular with parts in 4 or 5, thus: sepals 4 or 5, petals 4 or
.
5, stamens 8 or io in two series, the See also: outer of which is opposite the petals, and carpels 4 or 5
.
The corolla is usually more or less See also: bell-shaped, and in the heaths persists in a dry See also: state in the fruit
.
The petals with the stamens are situated on the outer edge of a
honey-secreting disk
.
The anthers show a very See also: great variety in shape, the halves are often more or less See also: free and often appendaged; they open to allow the escape of the pollen by a terminal See also: pore or slit
.
The carpels are See also: united to form a 4- to 5-chambered ovary, which bears a See also: simple elongated See also: style ending in a capitate stigma; each ovary-chamber contains one to many ovules attached to a central See also: placenta
.
The brightly coloured
1, Flowering shoot of Erica cinerea, about 12 nat. See also: size
.
2, Flower cut lengthwise
.
5,
3, Stamen showing appendages
and porous dehiscence of
anther
.
4, Capsule showing the loculicidal dehiscence ; a few seeds re-
corolla, the presence of See also: nectar and the See also: scent render the flowers attractive to See also: insects, and the See also: projection of the stigma beyond the anthers favours See also: crossing
.
The fruit is generally a capsule containing many seeds, as in Erica (fig
.
3) or Rhododendron; some-times a See also: berry as in Arbutus
.
The order falls into four distinct tribes, which are characterized by the relative position of the ovary and by the fruit and seed
.
They are as follows:
1
.
Rhododendron tribe, characterized by capsular fruit, seed with a loose coat, deciduous petals and anthers without append-ages
.
It consists mainly of the great genus Rhododendron (in which See also: Azalea is included by See also: recent botanists), which is chiefly
See also: main attached to the central See also: axis
.
See also: Diagram of the flower having four sepals, four divisions of the corolla, eight stamens in two rows, and four divisions of the See also: pistil
.
See also: developed in the mountains of eastern See also: Asia, many species occur-ring on the Himalayas
.
Dabeocia, St Dabeoc's heath, occurs in See also: Ireland
.
2
.
Arbutus Tribe.—Fruit a berry or capsule, petals deciduous and anthers with bristle-like appendages, chiefly See also: north temperate to arctic in distribution
.
Arbutus Unedo, the See also: strawberry-tree, so called from its large See also: scarlet berry, is a See also: southern See also: European species which extends into See also: south Ireland
.
Arctostaphylos (bearberry) and Andromeda are arctic and alpine genera occurring in Britain
.
Epigaea re pens is the trailing arbutus or See also: mayflower of See also: Atlantic See also: America
.
3
.
Vaccinium Tribe.—Ovary inferior, fruit a berry
.
Extends from the north temperate zone to the mountains of the tropics
.
Vaccinium, the largest genus, has four See also: British species: V
.
Myrtillus is the bilberry (q.v.), blaeberry or whortleberry, V . Vitis-Idaea the cowberry, and V . Oxycoccos the See also: cranberry (q.v.)
.
This tribe is sometimes regarded as a See also: separate order Vacciniaceae, distinguished by its inferior ovary
.
4
.
Erica Tribe.—Fruit usually a. capsule, seeds round, not winged; corolla persisting round the ripe fruit; anthers often appendaged
.
The largest genus is Erica, the true heath (q.v.), with over 400 species, the great majority of which are confined to the Cape; others occur on the mountains of tropical See also: Africa and in See also: Europe and North Africa, especially the Mediterranean region
.
E. cinerea (See also: purple heather) and E
.
Tetralix (See also: cross-leaved heath) are See also: common British heaths
.
Calluna is the See also: ling or Scotch heather
.
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