Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Dahlgren system

System of flowering plant classification From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

One of the modern systems of plant taxonomy, the Dahlgren system was published by monocot specialist Rolf Dahlgren in 1975[1] and revised in 1977,[2] and 1980.[3] However, he is best known for his two treatises on monocotyledons in 1982 [4] and revised in 1985.[5] His wife Gertrud Dahlgren continued the work after his death.[6]

Dahlgren ranked the dicotyledons and monocotyledons as subclasses of the class of flowering plants (angiosperms) and further divided them into superorders. Originally (1975) he used the suffix -anae, as did Cronquist, to designate these, but in 1980 changed this to -florae in accordance with Thorne. In the 1989 revision, published by his wife, the alternate names Magnoliidae and Liliidae were dropped in favour of Dicotyledon and Monocotyledon, and the suffix -florae reverted to -anae (e.g. Alismatanae for Alismatiflorae).

Reveal provides an extensive listing of Dahlgren's classification.[7] (Note the synonyms, both nomenclatural and taxonomic, for each name in the system.)

Remove ads

1980 system

Summary

Magnoliidae (dicotyledons)

Remove ads

1982 system (monocotyledons)

Summarize
Perspective

Summary

Six superorders

Details

Remove ads

1985 system (monocotyledons)

Summarize
Perspective

Summary

Ten superorders

Details

Liliiflorae

Ariflorae

Triuridiflorae

Alismatiflorae

Bromeliiflorae

Zingiberiflorae

Commeliniflorae

Cyclanthiflorae

Areciflorae

Pandaniflorae

Remove ads

Notes

    References

    Bibliography

    Loading related searches...

    Wikiwand - on

    Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

    Remove ads