Malvaceae subfam. Grewioideae

Dippel

Handb. Laubholzk. 3: 56. 1893.

Treatment appears in FNA Volume 6. Treatment on page 197. Mentioned on page 187, 188, 202.
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Herbs, subshrubs, or shrubs [trees]. Leaf blades usually unlobed, margins crenate to dentate. Inflorescences axillary, terminal, or leaf-opposed, fasciculate or cymose or solitary flowers. Flowers bisexual [plants rarely gynodioecious]; epicalyx absent; sepals usually persistent, 4 or 5, distinct, not petaloid, appendaged near apex [not appendaged]; petals (0–)4 or 5, distinct, base sometimes clawed, base with or without nectaries; androgynophore present or absent, base with or without nectaries; stamens [4–]5–100, distinct; anthers 2-thecate; staminodes absent [outermost stamen sometimes sterile]; gynoecium syncarpous. Fruits capsules, dehiscence loculicidal. Seeds 2–150, glabrous.

Distribution

United States, Mexico, West Indies, Central America, South America, Asia, Africa, Indian Ocean Islands, Pacific Islands, Australia, mostly tropical.

Discussion

Genera 25, species ca. 700 (2 genera, 8 species in the flora).

A large portion of former Tiliaceae is now included in Grewioideae; the remaining members of the former Tiliaceae have been transferred to other subfamilies in Malvaceae or to other families (C. Bayer et al. 1999). Grewioideae are sister to Byttnerioideae; together they represent the earliest branching subfamilies in the family (Bayer et al.; R. Nyffeler et al. 2005). Relationships within the morphologically diverse Grewioideae have been difficult to resolve (Bayer et al.; W. S. Alverson et al. 1999). U. Brunken and A. N. Muellner (2012) provided a new tribal classification for Grewioideae and evidence that morphological characters traditionally used to delimit taxonomic groups in Grewioideae (for example, the presence of an androgynophore) have arisen multiple times independently and should not be used as synapomorphies to define groups.

Lower Taxa

Key

1 Capsules glabrous or hairy, without uncinate spines. Corchorus
1 Capsules glabrous or hairy, with uncinate spines. Triumfetta
Margaret M. Hanes +
Dippel +
United States +, Mexico +, West Indies +, Central America +, South America +, Asia +, Africa +, Indian Ocean Islands +, Pacific Islands +, Australia +  and mostly tropical. +
Handb. Laubholzk. +
brunken2012a +
Malvaceae subfam. Grewioideae +
Malvaceae +
subfamily +