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Celastrales

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Celastrales

[‚sel·ə′strā·lēz]
(botany)
An order of dicotyledonous plants in the subclass Rosidae marked by simple leaves and regular flowers.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
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References in periodicals archive
The Families and Genera of Vascular Plants, Volume VI, Flowering Plants Dicotyledons: Celastrales, Oxalidales, Rosales, Cornales, Ericales, Springer, Berlin.
Phylogeny and delimitation of the Celastrales inferred from nuclear and plastid genes.
There were no differences in mean percentage of mortality, crown loss, uprooting, or defoliation among the families Aquifoliaceae, Melastomataceae, Myrtaceae, and Rubiaceae, or the orders Celastrales, Ericales, Myrtales, and Rubiales (ANOVAs, arcsine square-root transformed data, P [greater than] 0.05).
paniculatum and Salacia crassifolia (Celastrales: Celastraceae) between 2005 and 2008, with peak population in Oct (de Oliveira & Frizzas 2015), which corresponds to the beginning of the rainy season in Planaltina (Oliveira et al.
In total 17 orders (Acorales, Arecales, Buxales, Celastrales, Ceratophyllales, Crossosomatales, Dilleniales, Escalloniales, Garryales, Gunnerales, Huerteales, Paracryphiales, Petrosaviales, Picramniales, Santalales, Trochodendrales, Zygophyllales) remain blank spots on the angiosperm orbicule-map because no data on orbicules is available (Fig.
Melchior (1964), Benson (1979), Cronquist (1981) and Rouleau (1981) classify Buxaceae in Euphorbiales; Takhtajan (1983) in Hamamelidales, suborder Buxineae; Thorne (1983) in Pittosporales, suborder Buxineae; Emberger (1960) in Terembinthales; Melchior (1964) in Celastrales, suborder Buxineae; Dahlgren (1980) and Young (1981) in Buxales.
Celastrales. Monosymmetric flowers appear to be lacking (Matthews & Endress, 2005a)
Comparative floral structure in Celastrales (Celastraceae, Pamassiaceae, Lepidobotryaceae).
(Celastrales: Celastraceae) in association with Asobara anastrephae (Muesebeck), Doryctobracon brasiliensis (Szepligeti) and Opius bellus Gahan parasitoids for the first time (Table 1).
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