Pinales
The order Pinales in the division Pinophyta, class Pinopsida, comprises all the extant conifers. The distinguishing characteristic is the reproductive structure known as a cone produced by all Pinales. All of the extant conifers, such as Araucaria, cedar, celery-pine, cypress, fir, juniper, kauri, larch, pine, redwood, spruce, and yew, are included here. Some fossil conifers, however, belong to other distinct orders within the division Pinophyta.
Multiple molecular studies indicate this order being paraphyletic with respect to Gnetales, with studies recovering Gnetales as either a sister group to Pinaceae or being more derived than Pinaceae but sister to the rest of the group.
Taxonomy
History
first discerned that there were two groups of seed plants, distinguished by the form of seed development, based on whether the ovules were exposed, receiving pollen directly, or enclosed, which do not. Shortly afterwards, Brongniart coined the term Phanérogames gymnosperms to describe the former group. The distinction was then formalized by Lindley, dividing what he referred to as the subclass Dicotyledons into two tribes, Gymnosperms and Angiosperms. In the gymnosperms Lindley included two orders, the Cycadeae and the Coniferae. In his final work he described Gymnogens as a class with four orders;- Cycadeaceae
- Pinaceae
- Taxaceae
- Gnetaceae
- Gnetaceae
- Coniferae
- Cycadaceae
- Cycadales
- Bennettitales
- Cordaitales
- Ginkgoales
- Coniferae
- Gnetales
A system of two groups was maintained by the most commonly used classification in the twentieth century, the revision of the Engler system by Pilger, who grouped 12 families of the Gymnospermae subdivision into 2 classes;
- Coniferales
- Gnetales
In the latter, Cronquist divided Gymnospermae into two divisions;
- division Coniferophyta
- * class Coniferae
- * class Chlamydospermae
- division Cycadophyta
- * class Cycadae
- Conopsida
- Ephedropsida
- Gnetopsida
- Cycadopsida
- Cycadicae
- Pinicae
- Gneticae
- Cycadopsida
- * order Cycadales
- Coniferopsida
- * subclass Multinervidae
- * subclass Taxidae
- ** order Taxales
- ** order Pinales
- subclass Cycadidae Pax
- subclass Ginkgooidae Engl.
- subclass Gnetidae Pax
- subclass Pinidae Cronquist, Takht. & Zimmerm.
Controversies
Phylogeny
Gymnosperms form a group of four subclasses among the spermatophytes. In turn, the seed plants together with the monilophyte fern subclasses make up the tracheophytes, part of the class Equisetopsida, as opposed to the green algae. Among the seed plants, the gymnosperms are a sister group to the subclass Magnoliidae.There are about 1000 extant gymnosperm species, distributed over about 12 families and 83 genera. Many of these genera are monotypic, and another 27% are oligotypic. The four subclasses have also been treated as divisions of the Spermatophytes. Alternative names and the approximate number of genera and species in each are;
- Cycadidae
- Ginkgoidae
- Gnetidae
- Pinidae
Christenhusz and colleagues extended the system of Chase and Reveal to provide a revised classification of gymnosperms in 2011, based on the above four subclades. In this scheme, the Pinidae comprise three orders, including Pinales, and 6 families;
- Pinales Gorozh.
- Araucariales Gorozh.
- Cupressales Link
A more comprehensive analysis was undertaken by Ran and colleagues in 2018, as part of a detailed phylogeny of all seed plants. This forms the basis of the Tracheophyte Phylogeny Poster and the Angiosperm Phylogeny Website.
Subdivision
Historically conifers, in the order Pinales have been considered to consist of six to seven extant families, based on the classification of class Coniferae by Pilger, considered the standard through most of the twentieth century. These families were treated as a single order, in distinction to some earlier systems. His families were;- Araucariaceae
- Cupressaceae
- Pinaceae
- Podocarpaceae
- Taxaceae
- Cephalotaxaceae
- Taxodiaceae
Christenhusz and colleagues included only one family in Pinales, Pinaceae, a practice subsequently followed by the Angiosperm Phylogeny Website and the Gymnosperm Database. In this restricted model Pinales comprisea 11 genera and about 225 species, all of the other conifers originally included in this order, being included in other orders such as Cupressales.
Books
- *
- , see also Die Natürlichen Pflanzenfamilien
- *, in vol. 13 Gymnospermae
- , see also
- *, in
Encyclopaedias
Articles
Websites