|
|
| Pinaceae, Pine family | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scientific classification | ||||||||||
| ||||||||||
| Genera | ||||||||||
|
Subfamily Pinoideae Pinus - pines (about 115 species) Subfamily Piceoideae Picea - spruces (about 35 species) Subfamily Laricoideae Cathaya (one species) Larix - larches (about 14 species) Pseudotsuga - douglas-firs (five species) Subfamily Abietoideae Abies - firs (about 50 species) Cedrus - cedars (two to four species) Keteleeria (three species) Pseudolarix - golden larch (one species) Nothotsuga (one species) Tsuga - hemlock (nine species) |
The Family Pinaceae (Lindley, 1836), or the Pine family, is in the Order Pinales and includes most of the well-known conifers of commercial importance such as cedars, firs, hemlocks, larches, pines and spruces, in 11 genera and between 220-250 species (depending on taxonomic opinion). These trees and shrubs are mostly found in the North Temperate zone, grow from 2 to 100 m tall, are mostly evergreen (except Larix and Pseudolarix, deciduous), resinous, monoecious, with subopposite or whorled branches, and spirally arranged, linear (needle-like) leaves. Male cones are small and herbaceous; female cones are large and usually woody. Seeds occur two to a scale and are usually winged. Embryos are multi-cotyledonous.
| Table of contents |
|
2 External links 3 Links to other Pinales |
Reference
External links
Links to other Pinales
Pinaceae - Araucariaceae - Podocarpaceae - Phyllocladaceae - Sciadopityaceae - Cupressaceae - Cephalotaxaceae - Taxaceae