BOMBACACEAE


The name 'Bombacaceae' is a botanical name at the rank of family and, as is true for any botanical name, and status of the taxon varies with taxonomic point of view. The family name is based on the genus ''Bombax''.
Recent phylogenetic research has shown that Bombacaceae as traditionally circumscribed (including tribe Durioneae) is not a monophyletic group. Bombacaceae is not recognized by the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group I 1998, II 2003 and Kubitzki system 2003 at the rank of family, the bulk of the taxa in question being treated as subfamily Bombacoideae within family Malvaceae ''sensu lato'' (see also Sterculiaceae and Tiliaceae). A close relationship between Bombacaceae and Malvaceae has long been recognized but until recently the families have been kept separate in most classification systems, and continue to be separated in many references, including the newest reference work in classification of flowering plants: Heywood ''et. al.'' 2007 Flowering Plant Families of the World, Heywood, V. H., Brummitt, R. K., Culham, A. & Seberg, O., , , Firefly Books, 2007, .
Heywood ''et. al.'' say "although closely related to Malvaceae, molecular data supports their separation. Only pollen and habit seem to provide a morphological basis for the separation."
As circumscribed in its traditional sense, the family Bombacaceae includes around 30 genera (25 genera after Heywood ''et. al.'' ) with about 250 species of tropical trees, some of considerable girth, so called "bottle trees". Many species grow to become large trees, with ''Ceiba pentandra'' the tallest, reaching a height to 70 m. Several of the genera are commercially important, producing timber, edible fruit or useful fibres. The family is noted for some of the softest hardwoods commercially traded, especially Balsa, ''Ochroma lagopus''. The fruit of the Durian, ''Durio zibethinus'' is famous, tasting better than it smells. At one time the fibre from the Kapok tree, ''Ceiba pentandra'' was used in making lifebuoys. The Baobabs or "Bottle trees" (''Adansonia'' spp.) are important icons in certain parts of Africa, Australia and Madagascar, noted for their immensely stout trunk development, a mechanism for enhancing water storage.

Contents
Genera
References

Genera



★ ''Adansonia'' L.

★ ''Aguiaria'' Ducke

★ ''Bernoullia'' Oliv.

★ ''Bombax'' L.

★ ''Catostemma'' Benth.

★ ''Cavanillesia'' Ruiz & Pav.

★ ''Ceiba'' Mill.

★ ''Chiranthodendron'' Larreat. (according to Kubitzki in subf. Bombacoideae Kubitzki, K. & Bayer, C., (2003).The Families and Genera of Vascular Plants Vol. 5: Malvales, Capparales and Non-betalain Caryophyllales and considered more closely related to ''Fremontodendron'' by Baum ''et al.'' 2004 [1])

★ ''Eriotheca'' Schott & Endl.

★ ''Fremontodendron'' Coville (according to Heywood ''et. al.'' )

★ ''Gyranthera'' Pittier

★ ''Huberodendron'' Ducke

★ ''Matisia'' Bonpl.

★ ''Neobuchia'' Urb.

★ ''Ochroma'' Sw.

★ ''Pachira'' Aubl.

★ ''Patinoa'' Cuatrec.

★ ''Pentaplaris'' L.O.Williams & Standl. (according to Kubitzki in subf. Bombacoideae, but ''incertae sedis'' )

★ ''Phragmotheca'' Cuatrec.

★ ''Pseudobombax'' Dugand

★ ''Quararibea'' Aubl.

★ ''Scleronema'' Benth.

★ ''Septotheca'' Ulbr.

★ ''Spirotheca'' Ulbr. (according to Heywood ''et. al.'' )
;Genera of tribe Durioneae excluded from Bombacaceae after Heywood ''et al.'' 2007 and that should be included in Durionaceae :

★ ''Boschia'' Korth.

★ ''Coelostegia'' Benth.

★ ''Cullenia'' Wight

★ ''Durio'' Adans.

★ ''Kostermansia'' Soegeng

★ ''Neesia'' Blume
;Genus that should be excluded from Bombacaceae after Heywood ''et al.'' 2007 and that be included in Malvaceae s. s.

★ ''Camptostemon'' Mast.
;Genera considered synonym after Kubitzki 2003

★ ''Bombacopsis'' Pittier = Pachira Aubl.

★ ''Chorisia'' Kunth = Ceiba Mill.

★ ''Rhodognaphalon'' (Ulbr.) Roberty = Pachira Aubl.
;Genus not treated in Kubitzki

★ ''Lahia'' Hassk.

References


1. Baum, D. A., DeWitt Smith, S., Yen, A., Alverson, W. S., Nyffeler, R., Whitlock, B. A. & Oldham, R. A. (2004). American Journal of Botany 91(11):1863-1871.


Bombacaceae in L. Watson and M.J. Dallwitz (1992 onwards) ''The families of flowering plants: descriptions''.

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