FAMILY- Cruciferae
Family- Cruciferae The family includes about 375 genera and 3200 species. The family is also called Brassicaceae.Distribution: Most of the members of this family are cosmopolitan in distribution. T...
Family: Asteraceae or Compositae (Sunflower family)
Distribution: cosmopolitan in distribution but abundantly occurs in tropical and temperate
region. This family consist of 1528 genera and 23,000 species
Habitat: terrestrial, wild or cultivate for ornamental and oil
Habit: annual or perennial herbs, shrubs or trees (Senecio) or rarely climber (Walkeria), twiner
(Mikania)
Roots: tap root, sometimes modified into fasiculated (Dahlia) or tuberously swollen (Helianthus
tuberosus)
Stem: aerial, stolen (Bellis), sucker (Chrysanthemum), erect, branched, cylindrical, herbaceous
or woody, solid or fistular, glabrous or pubescent, generally oil passage or latix vessel are
swollen
Leaf: cauline and ramal, alternate sometimes opposite (Helinthus annus) or whorl (Eupatorium,
Zinnia), ex-stipulate, petiolate, simple, entire or serrate, ovate, acute apex, pubescent or
glabrous, unicoasted reticulate venation, parallel venation (Corymbium)
Inflorescence: racemose, head or capitulum (Trifolium)
Flower: head consist of two types of small flowers known as florets, ray florets occur at
periphery and disc florets at centre which are surrounded by involucre of bracts
Ray floret: bracteate, sessile, zygomorphic, incomplete, unisexual, pistillate, ligulate, trimerous
or pentamerous, epigynous, various colour
Calyx: sepals are represented by small hairs or scales like structures known as pappus or
bristles, persistent, superior
Corolla: petals three or five, gamopetalous, valvate aestivation, ligulate, superior, variously
colour
Androecium: absent
Gynoecium: carpel two, bicarpellary, syncarpous, ovary inferior, unilocular with single ovule,
basal placentation, style long, stigma bifid
Fruit: simple, dry, indehiscent, cypsela
Seed: two cotyledons, ex-albuminous
Disc floret: bracteate, sessile, actinomorphic, complete, bisexual, tubular, pentamerous,
epigynous, various colour
Calyx: sepals are represented by small hairs or scales like structures known as pappus or
bristles, persistent, superior
Corolla: petals five, gamopetalous, valvate aestivation, tubular, superior, variously color
Androecium: stamens five, syngenesious, synandrous, epipetalous, anther ditheocus, basifixed,
introrse, superior
Gynoecium: carpel two, bicarpellary, syncarpous, ovary inferior, unilocular with single ovule,
basal placentation, style long, stigma bifid
Fruit: simple, dry, indehiscent, cypsela
Identifying characters
Inflorescence is head or capitulum, head consists of ray florets at periphery and disc florets at
centre surrounded by involucre of bracts
Ray florets ligulate, unisexual, pistillate, sepals are represented by pappus or bristles,
androecium absent, gynoecium – ovary inferior, unilocuar with single ovule, basal placentation,
fruit- cypsela
Disc floret: tubular, androecium syngenesious, epipetalous
Classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Phanerogams
Sub-division: Angiospermae
Class: Dicotyledonae
Sub-class: Gamopetalae
Series: Inferae
Order: Asterales
Family: Asteraceae (Compositae)
Economically important plants
Artemisia vulgaris
Aster tripolium
Bidens biternate
Tagetes patula
Tagetes erecta
Chrysanthemum indicum
Eupatorium odoratum
Helianthus annus
Lactuca sativa