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Encyclopedia Britannica



ONAGRACEAE

This article appears in Volume V20, Page 105 of the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: NUM-ORC
ONAGRACEAE , in botany, an order of dicotyledons belonging to the
series
  Myrtiflorae, to which belongs also the myrtle order, Myrtaceae. It contains about 36 genera and 300 species, and occurs chiefly in the temperate. zone of the New World, especially on the Pacific side. It is represented in Britain by several species of Epilobium (willow-herb), Circaea (enchanter's nightshade), and Ludwigia, a small perennial herb very rare in boggy pools in Sussex and
Hampshire
 . The plants are generally herbaceous, sometimes annual, as species of Epilobium, Clarkia, Godetia, or biennial, as Oenothera biennisevening primroseor sometimes become shrubby or arborescent, as
Fuchsia
  (q.v.). The simple leaves are generally entire or inconspicuously toothed, and are alternate, opposite or whorled in arrangement; they are generally exstipulate, but small caducous stipules occur in
Fuchsia
 , Circaea and other genera. The
flowers
  are often solitary in the
leaf
 -axils, as in many fuchsias, Clarkia, &c., or associated, as in Epilobium and Oenothera, in large showy terminal spikes or racemes; in Circaea the small white or red
1 He is said to have reigned seven days, but the LXX. (B) in 1 Kings xvi. 15 read seven years. Further confusion is caused by the fact that the LXX. reads Zimri throughout for Omri.
flowers
  are borne in terminal and lateral racemes. The regular flowers have the parts in fours, the typical arrangement as illustrated by Epilobium, Oenothera and Fuchsia being as follows: 4 sepals, 4 petals, two alternating whorls of 4 stamens, and 4 inferior carpels. The floral receptacle is produced above the ovary into the so-called calyx-tube, which is often petaloid, as in Fuchsia, and is sharply distinguished from the ovary, from which it separates of ter flowering.
In Clarkia the inner whorl of stamens is often barren, and in an allied genus, Eucharidium, it is absent. In Circaea the flower has its parts
0
r, Flower cut open after removal of of Circaea. sepals; 2, fruit; 3, floral diagram.
in twos. Both sepals and petals are free; the former have
a broad insertion, are valvate in bud, and reflexed in the
flower; in Fuchsia they are petaloid. The petals have a narrow
attachment, and are generally convolute in bud; they are entire
(Fuchsia) or bilobed (Epilobium); in some species of Fuchsia
they are small and scale-like, or absent (F. apetala). The
stamens are free, and those of the inner whorl are generally shorter
than those of the outer whorl. The flowers of Lopezia (Central
America) have only one fertile stamen. The large spherical
pollen
  grains are connected by
viscid threads. The typically
quadrilocular ovary contains
numerous ovules on axile
placentas; the 1-to-2-celled
ovary of Circaea has a single
sa. ovule in each loculus. The
long slender style has a capitate
(Fuchsia), 4-rayed (Oenothera,
Epilobium) or 4-notched (Cir-
caea) stigma. The flowers,
which have generally an at-
tractive corolla and honey
secreted by a swollen disk at
the base of the style or on the
lower part of the " calyx-tube,"
are adapted for
pollination
  by
insects, chiefly bees and lepi-
doptera; sometimes by night-
flying insects when the flowers
are
pale
  and open towards
evening, as in evening primrose.
The fruit is generally a capsule
splitting into 4 valves and
leaving a central column on
which the seeds are borne as
in Epilobium and Oenothera-
in the former the seeds are scattered by aid of a long tuft of
silky hairs on the broader end. In Fuchsia the fruit is a
berry
 ,
which is sometimes edible, and in Circaea a nut bearing
recurved bristles. The seeds are exalbuminous. Several of
the genera are well known as garden plants, e.g. Fuchsia, Oenothera, Clarkia and Godetia. Evening primrose (Oenothera biennis), a native of North America, occurs apparently wild as a garden escape in Britain. Jussieua is a tropical genus of water- and marsh-herbs with well-developed aerating
tissue
 .


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