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'''''Amborella trichopoda''''' is a rare understory ] found only on the island of ]. It is of great interest in plant systematics because modern systematics, using molecular data, places it at or near the base of the ]s. That is, it represents a line of flowering plants that very early on diverged (about 130 millions years ago) from all the other extant species of flowering plants, and so gives us some idea about what the ancestral flowering plants were like. '''''Amborella trichopoda''''' is a rare understory ] or small ] found only on the island of ]. It is of great interest in plant systematics because modern molecular systematics data place it at or near the base of the ]. That is, it represents a line of flowering plants that very early on diverged (about 130 millions years ago) from all the other extant species of flowering plants. Comparing characteristics of this extant basal angiosperm, more derived flowering plants, and the fossil flowering plants may give us some idea of the characteristics of early flowering plants and how they have evolved, or changed through time.


The ] are alternately arranged, ], simple, with a serrated margin, and about 8–10 cm long. ''Amborella trichopoda'' produces small ]s 4–8 mm across in loose clusters, each flower with several spirally-arranged ]s. ''Amborella trichopoda'' is a sprawling shrub or small tree with two-ranked leaves without stipules. The ] are alternately arranged, ], simple, with serrated and rippled margins, and about 8–10 cm long. The plant is ]: each flower produces both ]s and ]s, but only one sex develops fully and is fertile in the flowers of an individual plant, the structures of the other sex remaining undeveloped. The small ]s, 4–8 mm across, are in terminal cymose inflorescences or clusters, each flower with a perianth of undifferentiated sepals and petals arranged in a spiral, rather than in the whorls of more derived flowers. The ] is a red berry containing a single ], 5–8 mm long.

''Amborella trichopoda'' is ]: each flower produces both ]s and ]s, but only one sex develops fully and fertile in the flowers of an individual plant, the structures of the other sex remaining undeveloped. The ] is a red berry containing a single ], 5–8 mm long.


Individuals of this species in the wild are being reduced by ] and ]. Individuals of this species in the wild are being reduced by ] and ].

Revision as of 20:46, 11 October 2006

Amborella
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae,
angiosperms
Order: unplaced
Family: Amborellaceae
Genus: Amborella
Binomial name
Amborella trichopoda
Baill.

Amborella trichopoda is a rare understory shrub or small tree found only on the island of New Caledonia. It is of great interest in plant systematics because modern molecular systematics data place it at or near the base of the flowering plants. That is, it represents a line of flowering plants that very early on diverged (about 130 millions years ago) from all the other extant species of flowering plants. Comparing characteristics of this extant basal angiosperm, more derived flowering plants, and the fossil flowering plants may give us some idea of the characteristics of early flowering plants and how they have evolved, or changed through time.

Amborella trichopoda is a sprawling shrub or small tree with two-ranked leaves without stipules. The leaves are alternately arranged, evergreen, simple, with serrated and rippled margins, and about 8–10 cm long. The plant is dioecious: each flower produces both stamens and carpels, but only one sex develops fully and is fertile in the flowers of an individual plant, the structures of the other sex remaining undeveloped. The small flowers, 4–8 mm across, are in terminal cymose inflorescences or clusters, each flower with a perianth of undifferentiated sepals and petals arranged in a spiral, rather than in the whorls of more derived flowers. The fruit is a red berry containing a single seed, 5–8 mm long.

Individuals of this species in the wild are being reduced by overgrazing and habitat destruction.

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