Meliaceae
Meliaceae, the mahogany family, is a flowering plant family of mostly trees and shrubs in the order Sapindales.
They are characterised by alternate, usually pinnate leaves without stipules, and by, apparently cryptically unisexual flowers borne in panicles, cymes, spikes or clusters. Most species are evergreen, but some are deciduous, either in the dry season or in winter.
The family includes about 53 genera and about 600 known species, with a pantropical distribution; one genus extends north into temperate China and south into southeast Australia, another into southeast Australia, and another nearly as far north. They most commonly grow as understory trees in rainforests, but are also found in mangroves and arid regions.
The fossil record of the family extends back into the Late Cretaceous.
Uses
Various species are used for vegetable oil, soap-making, insecticides, and highly prized wood.Some economically important genera and species belong to this family:
- Azadirachta indica, neem tree
- Carapa: includes the "crabwood trees" e.g. Carapa procera
- Cedrela odorata Central and South America; timber also known as Spanish-cedar
- Entandrophragma: includes sapele, and "utile" or "sipo" of tropical Africa
- Guarea, the genus of Bossé or "pink mahogany", includes: G. thompsonii and G. cedrata
- Khaya includes: Ivory Coast Mahogany and Senegal Mahogany
- Lansium domesticum, lanzones, grown for its edible fruit in Southeast Asia
- Melia azedarach, Chinaberry or white cedar
- Sandoricum koetjape, santol, grown for its edible fruit in Southeast Asia and South Asia
- Swietenia is the classic "mahogany" genus from the tropical Americas
- Toona: the genus of "toon tree" species, especially ''Toona ciliata''
Genera
Image:Aglaiaodorata1web.jpg|right|thumb|Chinese rice flower
The family is divided into two subfamilies, Cedreloideae and Melioideae, which are supported by phylogenetic evidence.