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      • Araceae plants, sometimes known as the "aroid" family, include pothos, philodendrons, anthuriums, and peace lilies. They are also renowned for their capacity to filter the air. Araceae are frequently propagated by cuttings, in which the plant stem is divided into pieces that can be rooted to produce a new plant.
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  1. Araceae, large family of flowering plants (order Alismatales) comprising more than 4,000 species in over 140 genera. Members of Araceae occur worldwide but are most common in the tropics. The family includes many climbers and herbaceous plants as well as rooted or free-floating aquatics.

    • Melissa Petruzzello
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  3. Mar 3, 2024 · What Are the Characteristics of Araceae (Aroids) Plants? Araceae plants have several characteristics that make them stand out among other plant families. These are as follows: Distinct inflorescence: Araceae plants have a floral structure that consists of a spadix surrounded by a spathe.

    • Raj Lal
  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AraceaeAraceae - Wikipedia

    The Araceae are a family of monocotyledonous flowering plants in which flowers are borne on a type of inflorescence called a spadix. The spadix is usually accompanied by, and sometimes partially enclosed in, a spathe (or leaf-like bract ).

  5. Common plants of the family: 1. Amorphophallus campanulatus (Teligo patato) is a terrestrial herb with roundish, watery thick corms. 2. Arisaema tortuosum (Snake plant) seen in Darjeeling and Shillong, is characterised by a greenish-purple spathe which expands over the spadix like the hood of a snake. 3.

  6. The arum family (Araceae) comprises 140 genera and about 4,000 species of flowering plants. The flowers are characteristically borne on a distinctive inflorescence known as a spadix and are usually surrounded by a single leaflike bract known as a spathe.

    • Melissa Petruzzello
  7. The Acoraceae are distinctive in being marsh plants with a spadix and spathe (resembling Araceae) but having distichous, ensiform, unifacial leaves, perispermous and endospermous seeds, and ethereal oil cells, and in lacking raphide crystals.

  8. General anatomy. Plants with laticifers (articulated, branched or not), or without laticifers (e.g. some Pothoideae, Pistia ). Plants without silica bodies. Accumulated starch other than exclusively ‘pteridophyte type’. Leaf anatomy. Stomata present (usually randomly orientated); paracytic, or tetracytic, or cyclocytic, or anomocytic (etc.).

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