Perennial or biennial, alkaloid-rich herbs, mostly bulbous with thick fleshy scales, occasionally rhizomatous; roots contractile, with scalariform vessels
Leaves
basal, distichous or rosulate; petioles, if present, often forming a false stem; blade simple, entire, linear to almost orbicular, sheathing at base, parallel-veined, glabrous or pubescent; mucilage-filled cells or raphides present in mesophyll; stomata anomocytic
Inflorescence
of reduced helicoid cymes, appearing umbel-like, 1-many-flowered; scape leafless, solid or hollow, glabrous or rarely pubescent; spathe-valves 1-many, obvolute or equitant, membranous and ephemeral or fleshy, brightly coloured and persistent
Flowers
bisexual, regular or irregular, trimerous, showy; pedicels short to long, stiff to lax
Tepals
6, in 2 equal or subequal series, free or partly connate into a short or long tube
Stamens
3 + 3, rarely more (Gethyllis), opposite tepals, arising from tepal base or perigone tube; filaments free or partly adnate to tepals, often connate into a short tube or large cup (false corona) at base; anthers 2-locular, basifixed or medifixed, versatile or filaments sometimes inserted into a sheath formed by connective, introrse or latrorse, opening by longitudinal slits or rarely by apical pores; pollen monosulcate with reticulate exine or bisulculate with spinulose exine
Ovary
inferior, 3-locular; style simple, slender, rarely strumose or winged basally (Strumaria); ovules 1-many per locule, centrally inserted, either bitegmic or unitegmic to ategmic; nectaries septal, rarely protruding into swollen style base
Fruit
loculicidally dehiscent or indehiscent; pericarp dry or fleshy
Seeds
variable, either dry, flattened and phytomelanous, globose to wedge-shaped and sometimes phytomelanous, or water-rich, subglobose and nonphytomelanous; embryo often green
Nomenclature:
Amaryllidaceae
Herbert: 53 (1837) in part
Baker: 171 (1896) in part
Hutchinson: 128 (1934) in part
Markötter: 1 (1936)
Barker: 108 (1939) in part
Traub: 76 (1957) in part
Hutchinson: 639 (1959) in part
Traub: 8 (1963)
Huber: 394 (1969)
Sölch & Roessler: 1 (1969)
Arroyo & Cutler: 467 (1984)
Schulze: 985 (1984)
Dahlgren et al.: 199 (1985)
Meerow: 169 (1995)
Snijman & Linder: 362 (1996)
Distribution & Notes:
Global
: Genera ± 60 and over 800 species; principally in warm temperate and tropical regions throughout the world. The family is most diverse in southern Africa followed by Andean South America
Southern Africa
: Genera 18, species ± 280
References:
ARROYO, S.C. & CUTLER, D.F. 1984. Evolutionary and taxonomic aspects of the internal morphology in
Amaryllidaceae
from South America and southern Africa.
Kew Bulletin
39
BAKER, J.G. 1896. Amaryllideae. Flora capensis 6
BARKER, W.F. 1939. South African
Amaryllidaceae
discovered since 1888.
Herbertia
6
DAHLGREN, R.M.T., CLIFFORD, H.T. & YEO, P.F. 1985.
The families of the monocotyledons
. Springer-Verlag, Berlin
HERBERT, W. 1837.
Amaryllidaceae
. James Ridgway & Sons, London
HUBER, H. 1969. Die Samenmerkmale und Verwandtschaftsverhältnisse der Liliifloren.
Mitteillungen aus der Botanischen Staatssammlung München
8
HUTCHINSON, J. 1934. The families of flowering plants, Vol. 2. Monocotyledons. MacMillan, London
HUTCHINSON, J. 1959.
The families of flowering plants
, Vol. 2, edn 2. MONOCOTYLEDONS. Clarenden Press, Oxford
MARKÖTTER, E.I. 1936. Die lewensgeskiedenis van sekere geslagte van die
Amaryllidaceae
.
Annale van die Universiteit van Stellenbosch
, Vol. 14,A,2
MEEROW, A.W. 1995. Towards a phylogeny of the
Amaryllidaceae
. In P.J. Rudall, P.J. Cribb, D.F. Cutler & C.J. Humphries,
Monocotyledons: systematics and evolution
, Vol. 2. Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
SCHULZE, W. 1984. Beiträge zur Taxonomie der Liliifloren 14. Der Umfang der
Amaryllidaceae
. Wissenschaftliche Zeitschrift der Friedrich-Schiller-Universität Jena/Thüringen.
Mathematisch-naturwissenschaftliche Reihe
32
SNIJMAN, D.A. & LINDER, H.P. 1996. Phylogenetic relationships, seed characters, and dispersal system evolution in
Amaryllideae
(
Amaryllidaceae
).
Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden
83
SÖLCH, A. & ROESSLER, H. 1969.
Amaryllidaceae
.
Prodromus einer Flora von Südwestafrika
150
TRAUB, H.P. 1957. Classification of the
Amaryllidaceae
: subfamilies, tribes and genera.
Plant Life
13
TRAUB, H.P. 1963.
Genera of the
Amaryllidaceae
. American Plant Life Society, La Jolla, California
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