Flowering plant families (APG IV) | |||||
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Early-diverging flowering plants | |||||
Monocots: Alismatids • Commelinids • Lilioids | |||||
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Eudicots
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Saxifragales, Vitales and Zygophyllales are three orders of flowering plants with a total of 18 families.[a] They belong to the superrosids, a group of around 150 related families, including the rose family. They are the only such orders that are not included in three large subgroups of the superrosids: the COM clade, the nitrogen-fixing clade and the malvids.[4][6][7][b]
The order Saxifragales includes fruit-bearing shrubs, woody vines, succulents, aquatics, and many ornamental trees and garden plants, including stonecrops, currants and witch-hazels.[4][8][9] Peonies are bred by horticulturists and widely cultivated in temperate gardens.[10] The antiseptic resin of sweetgum trees has been used as a balm since biblical times.[11] Cercidiphyllum japonicum, the largest tree species native to Japan, is used to make boards for the game of Go.[12] Redcurrants, rich in pectin, are used in jams and juices.[13]
Vitales and Zygophyllales include trees, shrubs, vines and herbaceous plants.[14] Krameria triandra is used as an astringent in mouthwash and toothpaste.[15] Wine, juices and jellies are made from grapes, and the leaves are also edible.[16] Guaiacum, in the twinleaf family, yields exceptionally hard lumber.[17]
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