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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AsteridaeAsteridae - Wikipedia

    Asteridae. Asteridae is an obsolete botanical name at the rank of subclass. Composition of the subclass has also varied; however, by definition it always includes the family Asteraceae (Compositae).

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AsteridsAsterids - Wikipedia

    Bruniales. Apiales. Paracryphiales. Dipsacales. In the APG IV system (2016) for the classification of flowering plants, the name asterids denotes a clade (a monophyletic group). Asterids is the largest group of flowering plants, with more than 80,000 species, about a third of the total flowering plant species.

  3. Oct 16, 2013 · Asterids. With over 80,000 species (> 25% of the total angiosperm species diversity) classified in 12 orders and about 100 families ( sensu APG III, 2009 ), the asterids constitute a highly successful evolutionary lineage of angiosperms. Of the 20 most species-rich angiosperm families, nine, i.e. almost half, belong to the asterids (in ...

  4. Aug 1, 2017 · The most recent common ancestor of all living angiosperms likely existed ∼ 140–250 million years ago 1, 2, 3. In contrast, the most recent common ancestor of all extant seed plants (that is ...

    • Hervé Sauquet, Maria von Balthazar, Susana Magallón, James A. Doyle, Peter K. Endress, Emily J. Bail...
    • 2017
  5. Jul 11, 2020 · Asterid Phylogenomics/Phylotranscriptomics Uncover Morphological Evolutionary Histories and Support Phylogenetic Placement for Numerous Whole-Genome Duplications | Molecular Biology and Evolution | Oxford Academic. Journal Article.

    • Caifei Zhang, Taikui Zhang, Federico Luebert, Federico Luebert, Yezi Xiang, Chien Hsun Huang, Yi Hu,...
    • 2020
  6. Jul 7, 2017 · Published: 07 July 2017. Evolution of the Araliaceae family inferred from complete chloroplast genomes and 45S nrDNAs of 10 Panax -related species. Kyunghee Kim, Van Binh Nguyen, Jingzhou Dong,...

  7. Mar 6, 2010 · The oldest accepted fossils for each clade were used to estimate minimum ages for the whole of the Asteridae. The results suggest that the Asteridae dates back to at least the Turonian, Late Cretaceous (89.3 mya) and that by the Late Santonian-Early Campanian (83.5 mya) its four main clades were already represented in the fossil record.

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