What’s a dichotomous key?
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- Group 1Lycophytes, Monilophytes
- Group 2Gymnosperms
- Group 3Monocots
- Group 4Woody angiosperms with opposite or whorled leaves
- Group 5Woody angiosperms with alternate leaves
- Group 6Herbaceous angiosperms with inferior ovaries
- Group 7Herbaceous angiosperms with superior ovaries and zygomorphic flowers
- Group 8Herbaceous angiosperms with superior ovaries, actinomorphic flowers, and 2 or more distinct carpels
- Group 9Herbaceous angiosperms with superior ovaries, actinomorphic flowers, connate petals, and a solitary carpel or 2 or more connate carpels
- Group 10Herbaceous angiosperms with superior ovaries, actinomorphic flowers, distinct petals or the petals lacking, and 2 or more connate carpels
Dichotomous Key to Families
See list of 185 families in this key-
1a. Plants typically reproducing by spores, seeds and fruits not produced; gametophyte independent of sporophyte; ferns and fern-like plants
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1b. Plants typically reproducing by seeds, the seeds borne within a fruit or not; gametophyte dependent on sporophyte; seed plants
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2a. Plants not producing true flowers; seeds commonly borne in strobili on the surface of a scale (embedded in a fleshy aril in Taxus), never enclosed in an ovary; styles and stigmas absent; trees and shrubs with narrow, scale- or needle-like, usually persistent, leaves
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2b. Plants usually producing true flowers; seeds enclosed in an ovary; stigma(s) and usually style(s) present, elevated above the ovary; woody or herbaceous plants with various types of leaves
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3a. Leaf blades usually parallel-veined (or the plants thalloid in some Araceae); seeds with 1 cotyledon; perianth typically 3- or 6-merous; vascular bundles scattered throughout the stem; secondary growth absent
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3b. Leaf blades usually pinnately veined; seeds with 2 cotyledons; perianth typically 4-, 5-, or more, -merous; vascular bundles arranged in a ring around a central pith; secondary growth absent or present
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4a. Plants definitely woody; secondary growth present (though difficult to detect in some genera)
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5a. Each node with 2 or more leaves or leaf scars (i.e., leaves opposite or whorled)
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5b. Each node with 1 leaf or leaf scar (i.e., leaves alternate; subopposite at some nodes in some Rhamnus and in Salix purpurea)
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4b. Plants herbaceous or suffrutescent; secondary growth absent
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6a. Flowers epigynous or partly so (i.e., ovary inferior)
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6b. Flowers hypogynous or perigynous (i.e., ovary superior) or the flowers lacking a perianth
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7a. Flowers zygomorphic
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7b. Flowers actinomorphic or without a perianth
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8a. Gynoecium apocarpous, appearing as 2 or more distinct ovaries (i.e., the flower with 2 or more pistils)
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8b. Gynoecium composed of either a single carpel or 2 or more connate carpels, the ovary thereby superficially appearing as 1 (i.e., the flower with 1 pistil)
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9a. Corolla gamopetalous
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9b. Corolla apopetalous, absent, or very inconspicuous
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Show photos of: Each photo represents one family in this top.