Difference between revisions of "Ephedraceae"

Dumortier
Common names: Mormon-tea or Joint-fir Family
Treatment appears in FNA Volume 2. Treatment on page 428.
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--><p>Genus 1, species ca. 60 (12 species in the flora).</p>
 
--><p>Genus 1, species ca. 60 (12 species in the flora).</p>
 
|tables=
 
|tables=
|references=
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|references={{Treatment/Reference
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|id=kubitzki1990a
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|text=Kubitzki, K. 1990. Ephedraceae. In: K. Kubitzki et al., eds. 1990+. The Families and Genera of Vascular Plants. Berlin etc. Vol. 1, pp. 379--382.
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}}{{Treatment/Reference
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|id=markgraf1926a
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|text=Markgraf, F. 1926. Ephedraceae. In: H. G. A. Engler et al., eds. 1924+. Die natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien..., ed. 2. Leipzig and Berlin. Vol. 13, pp. 409--419.
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}}{{Treatment/Reference
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|id=meyer1846a
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|text=Meyer, C. A. von. 1846. Versuch einer Monographie der Gattung Ephedra. Mém. Acad. Imp. Sci. Saint-Pétersbourg, Sér. 6, Sci. Math., Seconde Pt. Sci. Nat. 5(2): 225--298.
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}}{{Treatment/Reference
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|id=parlatore1868a
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|text=Parlatore, F. 1868. Gnetaceae. In: A. P. and A. L. P. de Candolle, eds. 1823--1873. Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Regni Vegetabilis.... Paris etc. Vol. 16, part 2, pp. 352--359.
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}}{{Treatment/Reference
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|id=stapf1889a
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|text=Stapf, O. 1889. Die Arten der Gattung Ephedra. Denkschr. Kaiserl. Akad. Wiss., Wien. Math.-Naturwiss. Kl. 56(2): 1--112.
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}}
 
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|illustration copyright=Flora of North America Association
 
|illustration copyright=Flora of North America Association
 
|distribution=Temperate and warm regions;worldwide except Australia.
 
|distribution=Temperate and warm regions;worldwide except Australia.
|reference=None
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|reference=kubitzki1990a;markgraf1926a;meyer1846a;parlatore1868a;stapf1889a
 
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Latest revision as of 20:25, 5 November 2020

Shrubs or vines, erect or clambering, Equisetum -like, dioecious (very rarely monoecious). Bark gray to reddish brown, cracked and fissured. Branches generally many, terete, whorled to fascicled, finely longitudinally grooved, internodes 1–10 cm. Roots generally fibrous. Leaves simple, opposite and decussate or whorled, scalelike, connate at base to form sheath, generally ephemeral, mostly not photosynthetic; resin canals absent. Pollen cones compound, 1–10 in whorls at nodes; each compound cone composed of 2–8 sets of opposite or whorled membranous bracts, proximal bracts empty, each distal bract subtending a small cone composed of 2 basally fused bracteoles subtending a sporangiophore bearing 2–10(–15) sessile to long-stalked, bilocular, apically dehiscent, pollen-producing microsporangia. Pollen prolate, with 6–12 longitudinal furrows, not winged. Seed cones compound, 1–10 in whorls at nodes of twigs; each compound cone sessile or on short to long peduncle, composed of 2–10 sets of overlapping, opposite or whorled, membranous or papery to fleshy bracts, proximal bracts empty, most distal bracts subtending 1 axillary cone composed of a pair of fused bracteoles enclosing a single-integumented ovule with integument projecting as tube from bracteole-envelope, envelope forming a leathery "seed coat" that is shed with seed. Seeds 1–2(–3) per compound seed cone, yellow to dark brown, smooth or furrowed; cotyledons 2.

Distribution

Temperate and warm regions, worldwide except Australia.

Discussion

In addition to the characters given in the key to families, wood anatomy can be used to distinguish Ephedra from the other gymnosperms in the flora. Only Ephedra has small cones, ring porous wood, wide multiseriate rays, and vessels in older stems.

Since antiquity, several species of Ephedra have been used medicinally worldwide. Such uses include cough medicines, an antipyretic, an antisyphilitic, a stimulant for poor circulation, and an antihistamine. These uses are based on the presence of tannins and alkaloids, particularly ephedrines.

Genus 1, species ca. 60 (12 species in the flora).

Lower Taxa