Loranthaceae
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- Related Topics:
- Santalales
- mistletoe
- Australian Christmas tree
- hemiparasitism
Loranthaceae, one of the mistletoe families of the sandalwood order (Santalales), having approximately 77 genera and about 950 species of parasitic flowering trees or shrubs. Nearly all of the Loranthaceae are limited to the tropics.
Physical description
The plants range in size from small herbs to trees up to 10 metres (about 33 feet) high; the smaller species are usually woody parasites on tree branches, while the larger species are root parasites. The unlobed leaves are usually evergreen, sometimes thick and fleshy, and arranged in pairs, each leaf opposite the other on the branch. The green leaves contain some chlorophyll, which allows the plants to manufacture food, but all Loranthaceae are parasitic to a certain extent and form connections (haustoria) to their hosts to obtain water and nutrients. The flowers are usually bisexual and often brightly coloured, and the fruits are almost always one-seeded berries. The berries are eaten by birds, who distribute the seeds by depositing them on trees or shedding them in droppings. Most seeds have a sticky viscidium that adheres readily to the bark of trees, where they are likely to germinate.
Major genera and species
The Old World tropical genus Loranthus, with about 500 species, is the largest genus in this family. Some of the other large genera include the tropical African Tapinanthus (250 species), the Southeast Asian and Australian Amyema (95 species), and the South American genera Psittacanthus (50 species) and Struthanthus (50 species).
The Australian Christmas tree (Nuytsia floribunda) is an attractive parasitic tree with showy flowers. The genus Gaiadendron consists of a single shrubby species, G. punctatum, found in wet areas of Central and South America. The family also contains a number of mistletoes, such as Atkinsonia ligustrina, the only species of its genus, in eastern Australia. Most other mistletoe species are in the related family Santalaceae.