Metadata
Title
Vegetative key to the families
Category
undergraduate
UUID
8153049d547448af8595aae9a6ebc3c9
Source URL
https://eflora.sydney.edu.au/browse/vegetative-key-to-the-families/
Parent URL
https://eflora.sydney.edu.au/browse/vascular-plants/
Crawl Time
2026-03-23T07:59:18+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Vegetative key to the families

Source: https://eflora.sydney.edu.au/browse/vegetative-key-to-the-families/ Parent: https://eflora.sydney.edu.au/browse/vascular-plants/

Vegetative Key Vegetative key to the families

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GRASSES. Herbs. Leaf bases modified to form an open sheath which encloses the stem; leaf blade with parallel venation and abruptly distinct from the sheath; LIGULE usually present at the top of the sheath (Fig 24) Poaceae

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PALMS. Leaves large, pinnately or palmately divided, the segments with parallel venation; leaf bases enclosing or clasping the stem. Young inflorescences enclosed by a large deciduous spathe Arecaceae

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STEMS SQUARE (or quadrangular), smooth or hairy but not scabrous; leaves opposite or rarely whorled, fragrant but usually without oil dots; fruit separating into 4 articles Lamiaceae

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HAIRS WITH SWOLLEN BASES present on leaves and stems. Herbs; whole plant scabrous and raspy to the touch; leaves alternate. Inflorescence cymose Boraginaceae

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OCHREA (sheath) Present around the stem and petiole, formed from fused stipules (Fig. 25). Leaves alternate. Herbs Polygonaceae

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Herbs with SWOLLEN NODES and opposite or rarely whorled leaves; leaves always simple with entire margins; the leaf bases often connate. Stipules mostly absent, sometimes membranous and connate Caryophyllaceae

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WOODY PLANT(usually shrubs) with leaves with PARALLEL VENATION (Fig. 26). Leaves alternate or spirally arranged, often crowded, rigid, ericoid, often sharp-pointed; the margins usually entire but sometimes denticulate; stipules absent Ericaceae

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PHYLLODES present with a raised or depressed extra-floral nectary on the adaxial edge, hanging or standing with the nectary uppermost. (A few species of Acacia with exceptional additional structures are included in the key below) (Mimosoideae Fabaceae

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INSECTIVEROUS PLANTS with either sticky glands on the leaves (Fig.28), or with bladders 1–2 mm long on submerged or subterranean leaves (Fig. 28). Very delicate herbs

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FREE FLOATING WATER PLANTS; roots, when present, not rooted in the mud. (Note: there are 2 genera of ferns which are free floating, see Azolla and Salvinia)

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Submerged plants rooted in mud. Leaves submerged or floating on the surface or sometimes the leaf blades held erect above the water surface. Freshwater or marine (Amphibious plants are not included in this group)

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MANGROVES. Woody plants growing in saline mud near the coast

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ROOTLESS EPIPHYTIC PARASITES.

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TENDRILS present on stem or leaves; plants climbing or decumbent

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LEAVES REDUCED TO SCALES ON THE AERIAL STEMS

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EPIPHYTES on trees or rocks

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LATEX (milky white or yellow) present in stem and leaves

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Either: leaves whorled; or leaves opposite and interpetiolar stipules present (Fig. 29). Herbs and woody plants

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