Rhizophoraceae
The Rhizophoraceae is a family of tropical or subtropical flowering plants. It includes around 147 species distributed in 15 genera. Under the family, there are three tribes, Rhizophoreae, Gynotrocheae, and Macarisieae. Even though Rhizophoraceae is known for its mangrove members, only the genera under Rhizophoreae grow in the mangrove habitats and the remaining members live in inland forests.
Taxonomy
This family is now placed in the order Malpighiales, though under the Cronquist system, they formed an order in themselves. It is sister group to Erythroxylaceae. The sister group to the tribe Rhizophoreae is Gynotrocheae. The generic relationships within the Macarisiae are not fully resolved.Within the mangrove tribe Rhizophoreae, there are four genera: Rhizophora, Kandelia, Ceriops, and Bruguiera. Bruguiera is the basal genus and Rhizophora the most derived genus in the tribe. Rhizophora is the only pan-tropical genus that is distributed along the intertidal zones of both the Indo-West Pacific and Atlantic-East Pacific regions. The remaining mangrove genera are restricted to the IWP region.
Genera
, Plants of the World Online accepted these genera:- Anopyxis
- Blepharistemma
- Bruguiera
- Carallia
- Cassipourea
- Ceriops
- Comiphyton
- Crossostylis
- Gynotroches
- Kandelia
- Macarisia
- Paradrypetes
- Pellacalyx
- Rhizophora
- ''Sterigmapetalum''
Morphological Characteristics
Within Gynotrocheae, Crossostylis is morphologically distinct from other Gynotrocheae in having capsular fruits that split open at maturity and an appendage on a mature seed. In addition, Crossostylis possesses a multi-celled archesporium in ovules just like members in Macarisieae, while the archesporium is one-celled in the other Gynotrocheae.
Among Rhizophoreae, there are three distinctive characters known as the adaptive features to the mangrove habitats: viviparous embryogenesis, high salt tolerance and aerial roots.
Vivipary: The embryo of Rhizophoreae starts germination without dormancy. It grows out of the seed coat and the fruit while still remain attached to the parent plant. Although vivipary is found in other unrelated mangrove taxa such as Avicennia, Nypa, and Pelliciera, they only break the seed coat but not the fruit wall before they split open. Vivipary in Rhizophoreae include several embryological characteristics: The development of cotyledons as a cylindrical body. The development of just one embryo, with other ovules being aborted after anthesis.
Wood anatomy: Rhizophoreae possess narrow and dense vessels. These wood structures keep the xylem sap in high tension to absorb water, resulting in a high sodium chloride concentration and high osmotic potential. Terrestrial species in Rhizophoreae could not survive in the intertidal zone because the osmatic potential in the sea water would be much higher than that in the xylem sap of the tree, resulting in water loss and disruption of cellular functions.
Aerial roots: Instead of having tap roots deep underground, Rhizophoreae develop roots that branch out from the stem some distance above the soil surface. Underground roots, like all plant tissues, require oxygen for respiration. In underground soils of terrestrial habitats, gas exchanges take place at the interstitial pores among the soil particles. In waterlogged soils, the diffusion rate of oxygen is extremely low. Rhizophoreae adapts to the anaerobic soils by having extensive roots above the ground which increases the surface area for gas exchanges. The surface of aerial roots carry numerous gas exchange pores called lenticels, through which oxygen could diffuse into the underground tissues with air-filled spaces.