Encyclopedia > Leguminosae

  Article Content

Legume

Redirected from Leguminosae

Legumes

Kudzu - larger image
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Fabales
Family: Fabaceae
Subfamilies
Faboideae
Caesalpinioideae
Mimosoideae
References
GRIN-CA (http://pgrc3.agr.ca/cgi-bin/npgs/html/family.pl?440) 2002-09-01

Legumes (Fabaceae or Leguminosae) are a family of plants in the order Fabales, and one of the largest families of flowering plants with 650 genera and over 18.000 species. This family contains some of the most valuable food crops, such as beans, peas, peanuts, and lentils. Other members of the family include important plants for animal feed or green manure such as lupins[?], clover, alfalfa, and soybeans. Some species such as Acacia, Mimosa and Flamboyant are (tropical) ornamental trees. Still other members of the family have medicinal or insecticidal properties (for instance derris[?]) or yield important substances like gum arabic[?], tannin, dyes, or resins. Finally, kudzu, originally planted for soil improvement and as cattle feed, is a notorious weed that grows over everything.

All members of this family have five-petaled flowers in which the superior ovary ripens to form a pod whose two sides split apart, releasing the seeds which are attached to one seam, alternately attached to one side or the other. They are classified into three subfamilies, sometimes raised to the rank of family in the order Fabales, on the basis of petal shape:

  • Faboideae (Fabaceae), also called Papilionoideae: One petal is large and has a crease in it, the two adjacent petals are on the sides, and the two bottom petals are joined together at the bottom, forming a boatlike structure.
  • Caesalpinioideae (Caesalpiniaceae): The five petals are equal in size and large.
  • Mimosoideae (Mimosaceae): The petals are tiny, and the stamens are the showy part of the flower.

Nitrogen fixation Many of the members of the Leguminosae family have the ability to fix nitrogen from the atmosphere, enabling them (or other plants that grow in the same soil later) to use the nitrogen. This is done with the help of symbiotic nitrogen-fixing rhizobium bacteria[?] which colonise the roots of the plants, forming "root nodules".



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
French resistance

... party. Musée de L'Homme[?] Another Parisian clandestine newspaper group. It also transmitted political and military information to Britain and helped to hid ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 33.3 ms