"Soapberry Family"
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Silver Maple |
Ruby Horse Chestnut |
The Sapindaceae family is comprised of 147 genera made up of 2,215 different species.
Serjania, the major genus of the family is made up of 215 species and the Acer genus has 111-200 species.
The Sapindaceae are primarily located in Tropical to subtropical areas extending into the north temperate region. They are found in abundance in Asia and America. In the United States and Canada there are 19 genera and 64 species,
the Acer, Aesculus, and Sapindus.
Click here for a distribution map of the Sapindaceae in the U.S.A.
Vegetative Characters | Reproductive Characters |
Diagnostic Characters | Economic Importance/Fun Facts | Evolutionary Adaptations and Relationships | Glossary of Terms |
References and Links | Pictures
- trees, shrubs, or woody vines
- leaves pinnately compound and sometimes simple, venation various
- leaves alternate or opposite, deciduous or persistant
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- inflourescence indeterminate of various forms
- flowers actinomorphic or zygomorphic, perfect or imperfect, usually hypogenous, minute to occasionally showy
- well-developed extrastaminal or sometimes intrastaminal disc
- calyx usually of 4 to 5 sepals, distinct to sometimes basally connate.
- corolla usually with 4-5 petals or absent, often clawed, often with scaly or hair tufted basal appendages.
- androecium of 10 stamens but often reduced to 8 or fewer in 2 whorles variously inserted within, around or on the disc.
- filiaments distinct, often hairy and anthers dehiscining longitudinally.
- gynoecium of 1 pistil, 2- to 3-carpellate.
- superior ovary, axial placentation, sometimes parietal
- 1 to 3 style(s)
- fruit is a loculicidal capsule, or a nut arilloid berry, or schizocarp.
- often 1-seeded
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- trees, shrubs, or woody vines
- sessile ovules
- androecium reduced to 8 or fewer stamen
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- edible seeds or arils from Blighia but deadly poisonous if not ripe also edible from Euphoria, Litchi, Litchi, and Melicoccus
- sugar and syrup from sap of Acer
- herbal medicines, timber and ornamental uses
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- Sapindaceae are defined to now include Aceraceae and Hippocastinaceae (Zomlefer 1994)
- the monophyly of this group is defined by both morphological characteristics as well as rbcl sequences (Judd et al 1999)
- the morphological data suggests that if the Aceraceae and the Hippocastinaceae are excluded the Sapindaceae are then a paraphyletic group (judd et al 1999)
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- Loculicidal: Longitudinally dehiscent between the partitions of the locule.
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- Zomlefer, Wendy B., 1994. Guide to Flowering Plant Families. The University of North Carolina Press Chapel Hill, NC USA.
- Judd, W. S., C. S. Campbell, E. A. Kellogg, P. S. Stevens. 1999. Plant Systematics: a phylogenetic approach. Sinauer Associates, Inc. Sunderland, MA U.S.A.
- http://www.noble.org/imagegallery/woodhtml/wood1-66/W31.jpg
- http://glossary.gardenweb.com/glossary
- http://bio.bd.psu.edu/plant_web/Ruby_Horse_Chestnut_Tree_medium.JPG
- http://www.meemelink.com/images/SAPINDACEAE.Ungnadia_speciosa.jpg
- http://www.csdl.tamu.edu/FLORA/Veg&Repro/V&R091.jpg
- http://www.hort.uconn.edu/plants/campus/uconn/dec/walk9/eight/kpan.jpg
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Ungnadia speciosa |
Sapindaceae |
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Sapindaceae dehiscing fruit |
Koelreuteria paniculata |
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For questions or feedback, contact:
Kelly McKay