Trees, shrubs, annual or perennial herbs, sometimes spiny or prickly; raphides (needle-shaped calcium oxalate crystals) present or 0
Leaves opposite or whorled, sessile or petiolate, simple, usually entire
Stipules interpetiolar (sometimes reduced to an interpetiolar line), sometimes intrapetiolar, often basally fused into a stipular sheath, entire or divided into lobes or fimbriae, often tipped or separated by mucilaginous hairs known as colleters
Flowers bisexual, rarely unisexual, usually regular, quite often heterostylous with 2 or rarely 3 forms (di-, trimorphic); rarely solitary, mostly in various terminal or axillary, basically cymose inflorescences
Calyx gamosepalous, (3)4- or 5(-8)-lobed, cup-shaped or tubular, entire, toothed, or lobed, sometimes obsolete, sometimes 1 or more lobes foliaceous
Corolla gamopetalous, (3)4- or 5(10)-lobed, glabrous or hairy outside and variously hairy within; tube campanulate, funnel-shaped, cylindric, rarely urceolate or saucer-shaped; lobes usually equal, shorter or longer than tube, often reflexed, valvate, contorted or sometimes imbricate
Disc various, sometimes 0
Stamens as many as and alternating with corolla lobes, rarely fewer, arising in corolla tube; filaments sometimes 0; anthers 2-thecous, basi- or dorsifixed, usually dehiscing by longitudinal slits, often apiculate, sometimes sagittate, sometimes hairy
Ovary inferior, rarely half-inferior, 1-10-locular; placentation axile or (in some Gardenieae) parietal; ovules 1-many in each locule, erect, basal or horizontal; style either simple, usually long and narrow and apically divided into 2 or more linear to clavate stigmatic lobes; or ending in an enlarged, variously shaped stigmatic knob (pollen presenter); or ± 0 and with (1)2 long, hairy stigmas (in wind-pollinated Anthospermeae)
Fruit a drupe, berry or capsule, sometimes crowned with persistent sepals, or indehiscent, or breaking up into cocci
Seeds small to fairly large, ornamented to smooth, sometimes winged; embryo usually straight and embedded in oily endosperm
Nomenclature:
Rubiaceae
Jussieu: 198 (1789)
Candolle: 341 (1830)
Sonder: 1 (1865)
Hooker: 7 (1873)
Hiern: 3 (1877)
Schumann: 1 (1891)
Phillips: 718 (1951)
Verdcourt: 209 (1958)
Launert: 1 (1966)
Dyer: 602 (1975)
Verdcourt: 1 (1976)
Distribution & Notes:
Global: Genera 630, species 10 200, cosmopolitan but especially tropics and warm regions
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Welcome to Biodiversity Advisor 2.0!
Biodiversity Advisor, developed by the South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI) and its Data Partners, is a system that will provide integrated biodiversity information to a wide range of users who will have access to geospatial data, plant and animal species distribution data, ecosystem-level data, literature, images and metadata.
The integrated information comes from our much-loved Botanical Database of Southern Africa (BODATSA) also known as Plants of Southern Africa (POSA), Zoological Database of Southern Africa (ZODATSA), Biodiversity Geographic Information System (BGIS), SANBI's institutional repository (Opus) and others.
The system is still under development, so you may find a few bugs/issues. If you do, please report it via the error reporting button available in various sections of the website or provide us with any useful feedback you may have via the ‘Give us feedback’ option available in the sidebar menu. You can create a free account for yourself by clicking on the user profile icon which will take you through to the login page. Here you can choose the ‘Create an account’ option or simply fill in your details if you have an account already. Having an account on Biodiversity Advisor will provide users with free access to biodiversity resources.
In future, Team SANBI will be able to log in using their day-to-day login details, BGIS users will be able to use their existing accounts and details, and general users will be able to log in using their LinkedIn profile, but for now you will need to create an account.