Amaranthaceae
-
Amaranthoideae
-
Amarantheae
-
Amaranthinae
-
Amaranthus
L.
Description
:
Annual or rarely perennial herbs, erect or decumbent, glabrous or furnished with short and gland-like or multicellular hairs; plants monoecious or dioecious
Leaves
alternate, simple, entire or sinuate, long-petiolate
Inflorescences
basically cymose, of dense to lax axillary thyrses or upper clusters dense, leafless, aggregated and spike-like, bracteate
Flowers
unisexual or bisexual; bracteoles 2-5, small and herbaceous or membranous and spinescent
Tepals
(1-3)5, glabrous, membranous, equal or subequal, free or connate below and somewhat indurate, occasionally absent in flowers of dioecious spp
Stamens
as many as tepals; filaments free at base; pseudostaminodes absent; anthers 2-thecous
Ovary
ellipsoid, compressed; ovule solitary, subsessile, erect; style short or absent; stigmas 2 or 3, subulate or filiform
Fruit
a dry capsule, usually enclosed in perianth, indehiscent or circumscissile, sometimes 2- or 3-toothed at apex
Seed
globose or compressed, black, smooth and shiny; testa thin; embryo annular; endosperm present
x = 17, 8 (7, 9, 10, 12) (high polyploidy)
Classification Notes:
A difficult genus, complicated by the cultivation of some species (e.g.
A. lividus
L. and
A. tricolor
L.) as green vegetables and others (especially
A. caudatus
L. and
A. hybridus
L. agg.) as grain crops
It is also a genus prone to hybridisation, though probably the frequency of natural hybrids has been overestimated
Nomenclature:
Amaranthus
L.
Linnaeus: 989 (1753)
Linnaeus: 427 (1754)
Brown: 414 (1810)
Hooker: 28 (1880)
Schinz: 102 (1893)
Baker & Clarke: 30 (1909)
Cooke & Wright: 408 (1910)
Adamson: 191 (1936)
Adamson: 360 (1950)
Aellen: 465 (1959)
Aellen: 109 (1964)
Podlech: 8 (1966)
Townsend: 471 (1974)
Townsend: 63 (1977)
Brenan: 451 (1981)
Townsend: 20 (1985)
Townsend: 45 (1988)
Townsend: 143 (1993a)
Townsend: 81 (1993b)
Distribution & Notes:
Global
: Species ± 60, tropical and warm temperate regions of both Old and New World, sporadic as weeds in cooler temperate areas
Southern Africa
: Species 15 native and introduced, mostly widespread weeds of cultivation
References:
ADAMSON, R.S. 1936. Notes on the species of
Amaranthus
in the Western Cape Province.
Journal of South African Botany
2
ADAMSON, R.S. 1950.
Amaranthaceae
Lindl. In R.S. Adamson & T.M. Salter,
Flora of the Cape Peninsula
. Juta, Cape Town
AELLEN, P. 1959.
Amaranthaceae
. In G. Hegi,
Ilustrierte Flora von Mitteleuropa
, edn 2, 3(2)
AELLEN, P. 1964.
Amaranthaceae
.
Flora europaea
1
BAKER, J.G. & CLARKE, C.B. 1909.
Amarantaceae
.
Flora of tropical Africa
6,1
BRENAN, J.P.M. 1981. The genus
Amaranthus
in southern Africa.
Journal of South African Botany
47, 3
BROWN, R. 1810.
Amarantaceae
Juss.
Prodromus florae novae Hollandiae et Insulae van-Diemen
1. Johnson & Co., London
TOWNSEND, C.C. 1993a.
Amaranthaceae
.
Flora of Somalia
1
TOWNSEND, C.C. 1993b.
Amaranthaceae
. In K. Kubitzki, J.G. Rohwer & V. Bittrich,
The families and genera of vascular plants - dicotyledons
2. Springer-Verlag, Berlin
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