Apodanthaceae Tiegh. ex Takht.

First published in Sist. Magnoliof. 42. 1987 [24 Jun 1987] (1987)
This family is accepted

Descriptions

Milliken, W., Klitgard, B. and Baracat, A. (2009 onwards), Neotropikey - Interactive key and information resources for flowering plants of the Neotropics. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0

Morphology General Habit
Herbs, achlorophyllous, endoparasitic
Vegetative Multiplication
Vegetative body filamentous endophytic tissues within roots and stem of host plant
Morphology Stem
Stem and leaves absent
Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers
Carpellate flowers: tepals 4-5, androecium absent (central column present, but anthers absent), ovary inferior or semi-inferior, syncarpous, carpels 4, locule 1, style absent, nectary as in staminate flowers Flowers a few mm in diametre, unisexual (plant dioecious); solitary, in groupings or rows, emerging from the host bark; bracts in two rows, free or connate Staminate flowers: tepals 4-5, stamens numerous,  connate into a central column, anthers as several protusions near apex of column, each with just one chamber, dehiscence by a transverse slit, nectary a ring of tissue at base of column and perianth
Morphology Reproductive morphology Fruits
Fruits berries, irregularly dehiscent; seeds numerous, small.
Note
Notes on delimitation: The family is frequently included in the Rafflesiaceae as a tribe (Apodantheae) or as a distinct family in Rafflesiales. It is considered a taxon of uncertain position by APG (Stevens 2008). Nickrent et al. (2004) suggest affinities with Malvales or Cucurbitales. Number of genera: Two: Apodanthes and Pilostyles. The structures around the flowers are referred to here as bracts, but they have also been called leaves (scale-like), scales or sepals (the inner whorl) by different authors.
Distribution
Apodanthes Poit.: from Mexico to northern South America. Pilostyles Guill.: from Chile and Argentina to Mexico. Both genera are native in the Neotropics.
Diagnostic
Key differences from similar families: The Apodanthaceae differ from other Neotropical holoparasitic families mainly by the absence of well-developed leaves. Hydnoraceae and Balanophoraceae are also leafless holoparasitic families. Hydnoraceae have medium-sized or large bisexual flowers, while Apodanthaceae have very small and unisexual flowers. Balanophoraceae have fungus-like inflorescences, flowers with 1-3 carpels, 1-3 locules and 1 seed per locule. Most holoparasitic families are parasitic only on the host roots. The Apodanthaceae are parasitic on aerial parts as well. Cuscutaceae  are parasitic exclusively on the aerial parts. This family includes vines with yellow, orange or red stems, flowers with distinct calyx and corolla and capsular fruits. Distinguishing characters (always present): Achlorophyllous and endoparasitic plants. Vegetative body resembling fungal mycelium (endophytic tissues in host plant). Stem and leaves absent. Flowers are the only visible part outside the host (solitary, in groups or rows). Flowers unisexual and very small, a few mm in diametre, subtended by scalelike bracts. Apodanthes is parasitic on plants of the families Salicaceae (Casearia and Xylosma), some Burseraceae and Meliaceae. The bracts are whitish and yellow to orange, brown or red, free in the inner and outer whorls and connate in the middle ones. Pilostyles is parasitic on plants of the family Leguminosae (Astragalus, Dalea, Daviesia, Mimosa). The bracts are red to brown and free.
[NTK]

George R. Proctor (2012). Flora of the Cayman Isands (Second Edition). Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew

Morphology General Habit
Dioecious endoparasites without chlorophyll Plant body filamentous, resembling a fungal mycelium inhabiting the stem tissues of the host plant
Note
The aerial portions of the parasite consist of flowering shoots, each producing a single flower, which bursts out of the cortical tissues of the host
Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers
These flowers are less than 1 cm in diameter, often only a few millimetres; a flower consists of a fleshy column bearing reproductive structures, subtended by 4–10 perianth-like scales (bracts?), these arranged in whorls; true petals are apparently absent Staminate flowers produce sessile anthers in 1–3 whorls attached to the fleshy central column; these anthers are 2-locular and may open by slits or pores; the pollen is often viscous
Morphology Reproductive morphology Flowers Gynoecium Pistil
Pistillate flowers have an ovary with a single cavity containing numerous ovules; style absent, the 1–several stigmas sessile on apex of the ovary
Morphology Reproductive morphology Fruits
Fruit a small berry with many seeds, indehiscent or rupturing irregularly; seeds minute.
Distribution
A small family of 3 genera with a total of about 23 species of wide distribution in tropical, subtropical, and warm temperate areas.
[Cayman]

Sources

  • Flora of the Cayman Islands

    • Flora of the Cayman Islands
    • http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0
  • Kew Names and Taxonomic Backbone

    • The International Plant Names Index and World Checklist of Vascular Plants 2024. Published on the Internet at http://www.ipni.org and https://powo.science.kew.org/
    • © Copyright 2023 International Plant Names Index and World Checklist of Vascular Plants. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0
  • Neotropikey

    • Milliken, W., Klitgard, B. and Baracat, A. (2009 onwards), Neotropikey - Interactive key and information resources for flowering plants of the Neotropics.
    • http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0