Many thanks Gurcharan ji for taking the lead.
Regards.
Dinesh



On Sat, Dec 3, 2011 at 6:18 PM, Balkar Singh <balkara...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Nice Start Up Sir
>
> On Sat, Dec 3, 2011 at 6:15 PM, Gurcharan Singh <singh...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> > Fabaceae  Lindley                       Bean or  Pea family
> > (=Leguminosae A. L. de Jussieu)
> >
> > Subfamily Caesalpinioideae DC.
> > B & H, Takhtajan, Thorne, APG III and APweb as Caesalpinioideae
> > Cronquist  and Dahlgren as family Caesalpiniaceae.
> >
> > Approx.150 genera,  2,700 species
> > Distributed mainly in tropics and subtropics, a few species in the
> temperate
> > regions.
> >
> > Salient features: Trees, shrubs or herbs, leaves usually pinnate compound
> > with pulvinate base, flowers zygomorphic  corolla not papilionaceous,
> > posterior petal innermost, sepals free, odd sepal anterior,  stamens 10,
> > usually free, in two whorls , ovary superior, carpel 1, fruit a pod.
> >
> > Major genera: Chamaecrisia (260 species), Bauhinia (250), Senna (250),
> > Caesalpinia (120) and Cassia (30).
> >
> > Description: Trees (Delonix), shrubs or herbs, rarely woody climbers
> > (Pterolobium, Bauhinia). Leaves alternate, pinnately or palmately
> compound,
> > sometimes simple (Bauhinia), leaf base (sometimes also the base of
> leaflets)
> > pulvinate, stipules present. Inflorescence racemose, in racemes or spikes
> > (Dimorphandra). Flowers bracteate (bracts usually caducous) bisexual,
> > zygomorphic, perigynous. Calyx  with 5 sepals, rarely 4 (Amherstia),
> free or
> > rarely connate (Bauhinia), odd sepal anterior. Corolla with 5 petals,
> rarely
> > 3 (Amherstia), 1 (Pahuda) or even absent (Tamarindus), free, not
> > papilionaceous, posterior petal innermost. Androecium with 10 stamens,
> > sometimes lesser (3 in Tamarindus), rarely more, free, sometimes unequal
> in
> > size (Cassia), anthers bithecous, dehiscence longitudinal or by apical
> > pores.   Gynoecium with a single carpel, unilocular with many ovules,
> > placentation marginal, ovary superior, style single, curved. Fruit a
> legume
> > or pod, rarely a lomentum; seeds 1-many, seed coat hard, endosperm
> minute or
> > absent, food reserves in cotyledons.
> >
> > Economic importance: The Subfamily includes several ornamentals such as
> > pride of Barbados (Caesalpinia pulcherrima), paulo verde (Parkinsonia),
> red
> > bud (cercis canadensis), Gul-mohar (Delonix regia), and several species
> of
> > Cassia and Senna.  Many species of Senna are cultivated for leaves that
> > yield drug senna. The heartwood of Haematoxylon campechianum (logwood)
> > yields the dye hematoxylin.
> >
> >
> > Please feel free to share photographs of your collection of this group
> > during the week. Also resurface any unidentified members and upload those
> > meant for fresh identification/confirmation.
> >
> > The mails should have subject line "Fabaceae-Caesalpinioidea
> > (Caesalpiniaceae) Week:.................."
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > Dr. Gurcharan Singh
> > Retired  Associate Professor
> > SGTB Khalsa College, University of Delhi, Delhi-110007
> > Res: 932 Anand Kunj, Vikas Puri, New Delhi-110018.
> > Phone: 011-25518297  Mob: 9810359089
> > http://people.du.ac.in/~singhg45/
> >
>
>
>
> --
> Regards
>
> Dr Balkar Singh
> Head, Deptt. of Botany and Biotechnology
> Arya P G College, Panipat
> Haryana-132103
> 09416262964
>

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