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POLYGONACEAE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 27 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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POLYGONACEAE  , in

botany, a natural order of
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Dicotyledons, containing 30 genera with about 700
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species, chiefly in the north temperate zone, and represented in
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Great Britain by three genera, Polygonum, Rumex (
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Dock, q.v.) and Oxyria . They are mostly herbs characterized by the union of the stipules into a sheath or ocrea, which protects the younger leaves in the bud stage (fig . 1) . Some are climbers, as, for instance, the
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British Polygonum Convolvulus (black bindweed) . In Muehlenbeckia platyclada, a native of the Solomon Islands, the stem and branches are flattened, forming ribbon-like cladodes jointed at the nodes . The leaves are alter-FIG . 1.—Leaf of Polygonum, nate,
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simple and generally entire; with
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part of stem (g, ocrea). the edges are rolled back in the bud . They are generally smooth, but sometimes, especially in mountain species, woolly . The small
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regular, generally hermaphrodite flowers are borne in large numbers in compound inflorescences, the branches of which are cymose . The parts of the flower are whorled (cyclic) or acyclic . The former arrangement may be derived from a regular trimerous flower with two whorls of perianth leaves, two staminal whorls and a three-sided ovary—such a flower occurs in the Californian genus Pterostegia (fig . 2) .

The flower of

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rhubarb (Rheum) is derived from this by doubling in the
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outer staminal whorl (fig . 3), and that of the dock (Rumex) by doubling in the outer staminal whorl and suppression of the inner (fig . 4) . In Koenigia, a tiny
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annual less than an inch high, native in the arctic and sub-arctic regions and the Himalayas, there is one perianth and one staminal whorl only . Dimerous whorled flowers occur in Oxyria (mountain
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sorrel), another arctic and alpine genus, the flowers of which resemble those of Rumex but are dimerous (fig . 5) . In the acyclic flowers a 5-merous perianth is followed ov, Pericarp formed from ovary wall . s, Seed . e, Endosperm . pl, Embryo with radicle pointing upwards and cotyledons downwards . by 5 to 8 stamens as in Polygonum (fig . 6) .

The perianth leaves are generally

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uniform and green, white or red in colour . They are
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free or more or less
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united, and persist till the fruit is ripe, often playing a part in its distribution, and affording useful characters for distinguishing genera or species . Thus in the docks the three inner leaves enlarge and envelope the fruit as three membranous wings one or more of which bear on the back large fleshy warts . Less often, as in the South
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American genus Triplaris, the three outer perianth leaves form the agent of distribution, developing into long flat membranous wings, the whole mechanism suggesting a shuttlecock . The number of the carpels is indicated by the three-sided (in dimerous flowers two-sided) ovary, and the number of the styles; the ovary is unilocular and contains a single erect ovule springing from the top of the floral axis (fig . 7) . The fruit is a dry one-seeded nut, two- Rumex obtusifolius,
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Common Dock . 1 . Upper part of plant, showing the flowers . 2 . Leaf from
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base of the stem . 3 .

Fruit enlarged . 4 . Fruit of Rumex Acetosa (sorrel) (enlarged) . sided in bicarpellary flowers, as in Oxyria . The straight or curved embryo is embedded in a mealy endosperm . The flowers are

wind-pollinated, as in the docks (Rumex), where they are pendulous on long slender stalks and have large hairy stigmas; or
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insect-pollinated, as in Polygonum or rhubarb (Rheum), where the stigmas are capitate and honey is secreted by glands near the base of the stamens . Insect-pollinated flowers are rendered conspicuous chiefly by their aggregation in large numbers, as for instance in Bistort (Polygonum Bistorta), where the perianth is red and the flowers are crowded in a spike . In
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buckwheat (q.v., P . Fagopyrum) the numerous flowers have a white or red perianth and are perfumed; they are dimorphic, i.e. there are two forms of flowers, one with long styles and short stamens, the other with short styles and long stamens . In other cases self-
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pollination is the
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rule, as in knot-grass (P. aviculare), where the very small, solitary odourless flowers are very rarely visited by
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insects and pollinate themselves by the incurving of the three inner stamens on to the styles . Polygonaceae is mainly a north temperate order . A few genera are tropical, e.g .

Coccoloba, which has 125 species restricted to tropical and sub-tropical

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America . Polygonum has a very wide distribution spreading from the limits of vegetation in the
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northern hemisphere to the mountains of tropical Africa and South Africa, through the highlands of tropical
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Asia to
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Australia, and in America as far south as Chile . Most of the genera have, however, a limited distribution . Of the three which are native in the- British Isles, Polygonum hao 12 species; Rumex (fig . 8) (II species) includes the various species of dock .(q.v.) and sorrel (R . Acetosa); and Oxyria digyna, an alpine 1 plant (mountain sorrel), takes its generic name (Gr . 411s, sharp) from, the acidity of its leaves . Rheum (Rhubarb, q.v.) is central
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Asiatic .

End of Article: POLYGONACEAE
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POLYGON (Gr. rroXus, many, and ywvia, an angle)
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