The Acanthoideae have been recognised as a morphological group since the late 1800s and their integrity has been confirmed by more recent molecular studies. They are distinguished from related plants (within the Lamiales, the order that also includes such plants as the mints and snapdragons) by having capsular fruits that dehisce explosively when mature to scatter their seeds. The seeds are attached within the capsule by hook-shaped stalks called retinacula that presumably play a role in determining how the seeds are released. A classification of Acanthaceae published in 1965 by Bremekamp restricted the family to species with explosive fruits and retinacula, dividing them between two subfamilies, the Acanthoideae and Ruellioideae, based on the absence or presence, respectively, of cystoliths. These are outgrowths of the epidermal cell walls that are impregnated with calcium carbonate. They are visible in the stems and leaves, at least in dried specimens, as hard white streaks. As phylogenetic studies have supported division of Acanthoideae in the broad sense between a cystolith-possessing and a cystolith-lacking clade, the decision whether to recognise 'Ruellioideae' as a separate subfamily comes down to a ranking choice only. At lower levels, the classification of Acanthoideae is less straightforward. Over two hundred genera of Acanthoideae are recognised but just three of those—Justicia, Strobilanthes and Ruellia—account for about half the total number of species. Each of these mega-genera is morphologically diverse and likely to be para- or polyphyletic with regard to related taxa, raising the distinct likelihood of future revisions.
Economically, few of the Acanthoideae are of great significance except for a number of species being grown ornamentally. One such species is Acanthus mollis, which goes by the vernacular name of 'bear's breeches' (why, I have absolutely no idea). Acanthus was a popular decorative motif in classical Greece and forms the basis for the design of Corinthian columns. Its use as an ornamental has lead to it becoming regarded as an invasive weed in some regions, largely because this is one of those garden plants that Just Will Not Die, spreading easily from seeds and tubers. We've got some in a pot outside that is currently flourishing despite having been burnt down to a nub by the searing Perth summer sun, metaphorically shouting its defiance at an uncaring world.
REFERENCE
Scotland, R. W., & K. Vollesen. 2000. Classification of Acanthaceae. Kew Bulletin 55 (3): 513–589.
I assume "bear's breech" or "bear's breeches" is a transformation of "brank ursine", another name of the plant from the mediaeval Latin branca ursina meaning "bear's claw".
ReplyDeleteWhose good idea was it, anyway, that the suffix for botanical subfamilies should be so similar to that for zoological superfamilies? (Or vice versa, if the botanists were first.)
ReplyDeleteI have no idea, though I suspect the botanists would have had dibs. Though offhand, until at least the latter part of the 1800s, what we now call plant 'families' were usually referred to as 'natural orders', so the two ranks may not have always been so different.
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