出典(authority):フリー百科事典『ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』「2016/03/21 23:55:38」(JST)
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Meconopsis simplicifolia
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ケシ科(ケシか、Papaveraceae)は双子葉植物に属する科でケシ、ヒナゲシ、ハナビシソウなどを含む。大部分草本で一部は低木。葉は複葉または切れ込みのある単葉。花は放射相称、がくは2または4枚、花弁は4・6・8枚、またさらに多数のもの、あるいは全くないもの(タケニグサ)もある。雄蘂は多数がらせん状に付くものが多い。子房は2ないし多数の心皮からなり、放射状の柱頭が直接子房に乗る。果実は蒴果。多くは乳液(白~赤色)を含む。麻薬原料のケシを初めとして各種アルカロイドを含み、有毒の種も多い。23属200種ほどからなる。日本にはタケニグサ、クサノオウ、ヤマブキソウ、リシリヒナゲシなどが自生し、ナガミヒナゲシ、アツミゲシなどが帰化している。
近縁な群としてケマンソウ科(コマクサ、ムラサキケマンなど)があり、これをケマンソウ(キケマン)亜科として含める場合もある(新エングラー体系など)。クロンキスト体系ではこの広義ケシ科をケシ目としている。
花の形態が、キンポウゲ科に類似する(子房が多数の心皮からなり雄蘂も多数ある)ものと、フウチョウソウ科やアブラナ科に類似する(雄蘂が少数で子房が2心皮からなる)ものがあるため、ケシ科はこれら2つの群を進化的に結ぶものと考えられてきた(そのため新エングラー体系ではアブラナ科などもケシ目に入れている)。しかし近年の分子系統学的研究から、アブラナ目とは直接は関係ないことが明らかになり、APG植物分類体系ではケシ科をキンポウゲ目に入れている。
ウィキメディア・コモンズには、ケシ科に関連するカテゴリがあります。 |
This article includes a list of references, but its sources remain unclear because it has insufficient inline citations. Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (September 2013) |
Papaveraceae | |
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Corn poppy (Papaver rhoeas) | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
(unranked): | Angiosperms |
(unranked): | Eudicots |
Order: | Ranunculales |
Family: | Papaveraceae Juss.[1] |
Genus | |
See text. |
The Papaveraceae /pəpeɪvəˈreɪsiː/ or /pəpɑːvəˈreɪsiː/, informally known as the poppy family, are an economically important family of about 44 genera and approximately 770 species of flowering plants in the order Ranunculales. The family is cosmopolitan, occurring in temperate and subtropical climates (mostly in the northern hemisphere), but almost unknown in the tropics. Most are herbaceous plants, but a few are shrubs and small trees. The family currently includes two groups that have been considered to be separate families: Fumariaceae and Pteridophyllaceae.
The plants may be annual, biennial, or perennial. Usually herbaceous, a few species form shrubs or evergreen trees. They are lactiferous, producing latex, which may be milky or watery, coloured or plain. All parts contain a well-developed duct system (these ducts are called "laticifers"), producing a milky latex, a watery white, yellow or red juice.
The simple leaves are alternate or sometimes whorled. They have petioles and are not enclosed by a sheath. The leaves are usually lobed or pinnatifid (i.e. consisting of several not entirely separate leaflets), or much divided. There are no stipules.
The plants are hermaphroditic and are pollinated mostly by insects (entomophilous); flower nectaries are lacking. A few are wind pollinated (anemophilous). There is a distinct calyx and corolla, except in Macleaya where the corolla is lacking. The flowers are medium-sized or large. The terminal flowers are solitary in many species. In others the terminal inflorescence is cymose or racemose. The flowers are odourless and regular.
There are many stamens, mostly 16 to 60, arranged in two separate whorls, the outer one with stamens alternating with petals, the inner one opposite. The gynoecium consists of a compound pistil with 2 to 100 carpels. The ovary is superior and unilocular. The ovary is either stemless (sessile) or on a short stem (stipitate).
The non-fleshy fruit is usually a capsule, breaking open at maturity to release the seeds through pores (poricidal), through the partitions between the cells (septicidal), or by means of valves (valvular). The numerous seeds are small. Their nutritive tissue (endosperm) is oily and farinose. The fruit of Platystemon is a schizocarp.
The basic chromosome number, x, is 6, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11, up to 2n = 84 (dodecaploidy) in species of Papaver, Argemone and Meconopsis.
The APG III system (2009; unchanged from the APG II system of 2003 and the APG system of 1998) places the family in the order Ranunculales, in the clade eudicots.[1] The Papaveraceae differ from the rest of the Ranunculales in some important characteristics but they share others such as the presence of isoquinoline-derived alkaloids. Based on molecular and morphological data, the family forms a clade with the families Lardizabalaceae, Circaeasteraceae, Menispermaceae, Berberidaceae and Ranunculaceae.[2]
The broad circumscription of Papaveraceae in the APG III system includes three taxa that have been separated into different families: the Papaveraceae sensu stricto, the Fumariaceae and the Pteridophyllaceae.[1] Thus the Cronquist system of 1981 recognised the Fumariaceae as a separate family, despite their close phylogenetic relationship to the Papaveraceae sensu stricto. The three former families may be treated as subfamilies. One morphological and molecular study concluded that the former family Pteridophyllaceae has a basal position with a subsequent division into two terminal clades each containing one of the subfamilies Fumarioideae and Papaveroideae, which are clearly monophyletic.[3] A more recent study includes the former Pteridophyllaceae in the Fumarioideae, dividing the Papaveraceae into only two subfamilies.[4]
The internal division of the Fumarioideae shown below follows Lidén (1993),[5] with the exception of the placement of Pteridophyllum.[4][2] The subtribes are given by the Germplasm Resources Information Network.[6] The division of the Papaveroideae follows Hoot et al. (1997).[3] In the latter study, the Eschscholzieae tribe would be the basal clade and sister group to the rest of the subfamily, which is divided into a different terminal clade (Chelidonieae) and into its sister group, formed by the Papavereae and Platystemoneae, whose separation is not based on the data presented by these authors. For discussions of subfamilies, see Carolan et al. (2006)[7] and Blattner & Kadereit (1999).[8]
Hypecoum procumbens
Scrambled eggs (Corydalis aurea)
Fumewort (Corydalis solida)
Ferny corydalis (Corydalis cheilanthifolia)
Pale corydalis (Capnoides sempervirens)
Climbing bleeding-heart (Dactylicapnos scandens or Dicentra scandens)
Dutchman's breeches (Dicentra cucullaria)
Fringed bleeding-heart (Dicentra eximia)
Komakusa (Dicentra peregrina)
Golden eardrops (Ehrendorferia chrysantha or Dicentra chrysantha)
Asian bleeding-heart (Lamprocapnos spectabilis or Dicentra spectabilis)
Earth smoke (Fumaria officinalis)
Yellow corydalis (Pseudofumaria lutea or Corydalis lutea)
Zapatitos de la Virgen (Sarcocapnos enneaphylla)
Channel Island tree poppy (Dendromecon harfordii)
Tulip poppy (Hunnemannia fumariifolia)
Plume poppy (Bocconia frutescens)
Greater celandine (Chelidonium majus)
Eastern horned poppy (Dicranostigma erectum)
Red horned poppy (Glaucium corniculatum)
Snow-poppy (Eomecon chionantha)
Forest poppy (Hylomecon vernalis)
Macleaya cordata
Bloodroot (Sanguinaria canadensis)
Wood poppy (Stylophorum diphyllum)
Creamcups (Platystemon californicus)
Bearpaw poppy (Arctomecon californica)
Flat-bud prickly poppy (Arctomecon munita)
Pygmy poppy (Canbya candida)
Arctic poppy (Papaver nudicaule)
Persian poppy (Papaver bracteatum)
Opium poppy (Papaver somniferum)
Matilija poppy (Romneya coulteri)
Pollination is entomophile (basically by flies and wasps and bees, less often by beetles), except in Bocconia and Macleaya. In Papaveroideae, the reward is pollen as there is no nectar. The visual attractant is the petals that are usually brightly coloured and often have basal guides, sometimes the attractant can also be the androecium as the petals do not last long. Some species, mostly those from the arctic and alpine regions, reinforce their attraction with floral fragrance (for example, Papaver alpinum smells of cloves), which in the case of Romneya drugs the insects. The anthers and stigmas mature at the same time, but Bocconia is clearly protogynous, the stigmas emerge from the calyx that encloses them. Autopollination is common and in some cases (for example, Roemeria hybrida) it occurs before the bud opens (cleistogamy). The presence of an aril suggests dispersion of seeds by ants (myrmecochory), once they have been expelled by the fruit. In the case of Bocconia the seeds remain attached to the replums after the capsule’s valves have fallen leaving their brilliant red or orange arils exposed, which attract birds to feed on them, facilitating their dispersal (ornithochory). Seeds that lack an aril appear to be dispersed by the wind (anemochory) for capsules that open, in the other cases they are freed when the fruit decomposes. Many Fumarioideae species have explosive fruits (ballistic), while Rupicapnos and Sarcocapnos species are chasmophytes, growing on rocks, and their fruit’s peduncles and pedicles are geotropic and they lengthen so that the seeds bury into the base of the plant.
The Papaveroideae typically grow in cooler and wooded areas, forming part of the undergrowth. They have adapted to arctic and alpine habitats and to arid, Mediterranean areas, many species are ruderal and segetal (growing in cornfields). Pteridophyllum grows in the undergrowth of woods of needle-leaved trees between 1,000 m and 2,000 m. The Fumarioideae are basically found in open, rocky, alpine landscapes or vertical or overhanging cracks, while some species are ruderal or segetal.
Alkaloids: The isoquinolinic alkaloids present in the family are well known. They are derived from berberine, tetrahydroberberine, protopine and benzophenanthridine in Papaveroideae, and from spirobenzylisoquinoline and cularine in Fumarioideae, as well as from other groups that give them pharmacological properties: derivatives of aporphine, morphinan, pavine, isopavine, narceine and rhoeadine.
Others: Other characteristic substances contained within these species include: meconic acid and chelidonic acid, as well as cyanogenic glycoside compounds derived from tyrosine: dhurrin and triglochinin; in the Fumarioideae while the Chelidonieae contain the free amino acid δ-acetylornithine.
Flavonoids: Iridoids and proanthocyanidins absent. Flavonols, kaempferol and/or quercetin present.
Many of these plants are poisonous. The Mexican prickly poppy is poisonous if taken internally and may cause oedema and glaucoma. Even if an animal, such as a goat, should persist in grazing on this plant, not only will the animal suffer but so will those who drink its milk, because the poisons are passed along in the milk.
The fossils of the late Cretaceous poppy Palaeoaster inquirenda from the Western Interior of North America occurs from 74.5 million year old deposits in the Fruitland Formation in New Mexico to 64.5 million year old deposits in the Hell Creek Formation in North Dakota. Dehiscent fruit fossils of Palaeoaster have been found at the excavation site for the well known Tyrannosaurus rex specimen BHI 3033. The seed capsule of Palaeoaster has some similarities to that of the extant poppy genus Romneya.[10]
Papaverites a fruit from the Eocene of Germany may be associated with Papaveraceae. Chesters et al. (1967) mentions Papaver pictum from the Oligocene of England. [11]
The family is well known for its striking flowers, with many species grown as ornamental plants, including California poppy (Eschscholtzia californica, the California state flower), the stunning blue Himalayan poppies (Meconopsis), several species of Papaver, and the wildflower bloodroot. Only two species are of economic importance for the production of opium and its derivatives for pharmaceutical use: Papaver somniferum is cultivated legally in order to obtain morphine and other opiates, and Papaver bracteatum, for thebaine. Papaver somniferum is also the source of the poppy seeds used in cooking and baking, and poppy seed oil. The illegal cultivation of poppies in Asia for the production of opium and heroin is virtually equal to the legal production in the rest of the world. Some Funarioideae have a limited use in gardening, with Lamprocapnos spectabilis ("bleeding heart"), and Pseudofumaria lutea ("yellow corydalis") commonly used. Chinese traditional medicine used the boiled and dried tubers of Corydalis yanhusuo ("yanhusuo").
The opium poppy and corn poppy are symbols, respectively, of sleep and death. In Great Britain, Canada, the United States, and Australia the corn poppy is worn in remembrance of World War I.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Papaveraceae. |
リンク元 | 「Papaver」「ケシ科」「poppy」 |
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