For Students
Annotated classification
With 7 extant families, 68 genera, and 545 species, classification of the extant conifers remains controversial. Disagreements exist throughout the classification, so that the numbers of orders, families, genera, and species are all disputed. The classification outlined here reflects current opinion for living conifers but simplifies extinct groups because the number of families to be recognized among the fossils is so uncertain. Extinct groups are indicated by a dagger (†).
- †Class Cordaitopsida
- Paleozoic; strap-shaped leaves, up to 1 metre (3 feet) long, much larger than those of true conifers; both pollen and seed cones were compound and open, each bract with an axillary branch bearing numerous scale leaves surrounding pollen sacs or ovules; generally considered the ancestors of the Coniferales.
- Class Pinopsida
- Order Pinales
- Contains the extant coniferophytes and a number of fossil families; ovules attached to the scales of a condensed compound seed cone; families defined by seed-cone structure.
- †Families Walchiaceae and Voltziaceae
- Paleozoic and Mesozoic; show many stages in the transformation of the seed-bearing dwarf shoots of cordaiteans into the unified, flattened seed scales of modern conifers; foliage resembled that of araucarians; include Walchia, Voltzia, and Voltziopsis.
- Family Pinaceae
- Largest and most widespread and abundant modern conifer family in the Northern Hemisphere; woody, usually thin, cone scales carry 2 winged seeds and are fused to the bracts only at their bases; bracts usually hidden by the scales in mature seed cones but may be prominently exserted in some species; leaves are most often needlelike and spirally arranged, either singly or in clusters; pine (Pinus), spruces (Picea), firs (Abies), and larches (Larix) are all found across the Northern Hemisphere, while Douglas firs (Pseudotsuga) and hemlocks (Tsuga) are restricted to North America and Asia, Cathaya, Keteleeria, Nothotsuga, and Pseudolarix are restricted to China, and the true cedars (Cedrus) occur from Morocco to the Himalayas; 11 extant genera; about 200 species.
- Family Araucariaceae
- From Triassic; massive seed cones with a single large seed on each cone scale; highly reduced scales completely fused to the much larger bracts; species of Araucaria have branches densely clothed with prickly, spirally arranged, clawlike-to-wedge-shaped leaves; dammars (Agathis) have well-separated, oppositely arranged oval or oblong leaves; found in South America, Southeast Asia, and Australasia; 3 extant genera and 33 species.
- Family Sciadopityaceae
- Umbrella pine (Sciadopitys verticillata) usually included in the Cupressaceae, but recent work confirms its isolation from that family; seed cones superficially resemble those of the giant sequoia (Sequoiadendron giganteum), but the equal-sized scales and bracts fused for only about two thirds of their length, each having 5 to 9 seeds; foliage consists of whorls of about 15 to 20 double needles separated by stem segments with spirally arranged nonphotosynthetic scale leaves; endemic to Japan.
- Family Cupressaceae
- Although species of this family are traditionally divided between 2 families, Cupressaceae for the cypresses (Cupressus) and similar genera and Taxodiaceae for the much more-varied genera allied to the bald cypress (Taxodium) and redwood (Sequoia), present evidence shows that all belong to a single family containing 30 genera and 133 species; scales of seed cone intimately fused to the bracts; scale complexes vary in texture, shape, and arrangement on the cone; most have 3 to 5 seeds per scale, but the number ranges from 1 to about 20; leaves vary in shape from scales to clawlike or needlelike and are spirally arranged or in opposite pairs or whorls of 3; several genera, usually referred to as cedars (such as Calocedrus, Chamaecyparis, Libocedrus, and Thuja), have flattened sprays of frondlike branches closely covered with scale leaves; considerable diversity in both the Northern (18 genera) and Southern (11 genera) hemispheres; 50 or more species of junipers (Juniperus) are widespread, exceeding even the pines in their coverage of the Northern Hemisphere; other genera include Athrotaxis, Callitris, Cryptomeria, Cunninghamia, Diselma, Fitzroya, Metasequoia, Microbiota, Neocallitropsis, Sequoiadendron, and Widdringtonia.
- Family Podocarpaceae
- Seed cone is reduced, with 1 to few highly modified, brightly coloured, fleshy scales, each called an epimatium and surrounding a single seed; most with spirally arranged, yewlike needles, but scale leaves and opposite, broad, oblong blades (up to 30 cm [12 inches] long and 5 cm [2 inches] wide) are also found; nearly 200 species in about 18 genera, including Decussocarpus, Lepidothamnus, Microcachrys, Parasitaxus, Phyllocladus, Podocarpus, and Saxegothaea. Phyllocladus was for a time thought to comprise a new family, Phyllocladaceae, but genetic evidence demonstrates the genus’s affinity with Podocarpaceae.
- Family Cephalotaxaceae
- Seed cones highly modified with a few opposite pairs of small bracts, each with a greatly reduced scale remnant strongly dominated by a pair of ovules; only 1 ovule develops into a large seed with a fleshy seed coat; leaves are large yewlike needles carried in opposite pairs; found in East Asia, the plum-yews (Amentotaxus, Cephalotaxus) are the second smallest and most-local extant conifer family; 2 genera and about 11 species. Some botanists include this family in Taxaceae.
- Family Taxaceae
- Solitary ovules borne at the end of a dwarf shoot bearing densely spiraled scale leaves; mature seeds surrounded by a fleshy aril and may also have fleshy seed coats; Taxus seeds are highly toxic; pollen cones and flattened, needlelike leaves are more like those of other conifers than are their seeds; widely distributed in the Northern Hemisphere, but Torreya is found in restricted areas of both North America and East Asia, Pseudotaxus is localized in China, and Austrotaxus is endemic to New Caledonia; 6 genera and about 30 species often segregated into an order separate from Pinales because of absence of seed cone.