Rosaceae - Taxonomy

Taxonomy

The family was traditionally divided into four subfamilies: Rosoideae, Spiraeoideae, Maloideae, and Amygdaloideae, primarily diagnosed by the structure of the fruits. More recent work has identified that not all of these groups were monophyletic. A more modern view comprises three subfamilies, one of which (Rosoideae) has largely remained the same. A cladogram of the family is shown below:


Rosoideae

Filipendula


Rosodae nom. illeg.;

Sanguisorbeae



Potentilleae



Colurieae






Dryadoideae


Amygdaloideae

Lyonothamnus



Amygdaleae
(previously Amygdaloideae (or Prunoideae) sensu stricto)



Sorbarieae



Spiraeeae


Kerriodae nom. illeg.

Kerrieae



Osmarioneae



Pyrodae nom. illeg.

Gillenia


Maleae
(previously Maloideae sensu lato)

Kageneckia



Vauquelinia



Lindleya



Malinae
(previously Maloideae (or Pomoideae) sensu stricto)







While the boundaries of Rosaceae are not disputed, there is not general agreement as to how many genera it should be divided into. Areas of divergent opinion include the treatment of Potentilla s.l. and Sorbus s.l.. Compounding the problem is the fact that apomixis is common in several genera. This results in an uncertainty in the number of species contained in each of these genera, due to the difficulty of dividing apomictic complexes into species. For example, Cotoneaster contains between 70 and 300 species, Rosa around 100 (including the taxonomically complex dog roses), Sorbus 100 to 200 species, Crataegus between 200 and 1,000, Alchemilla contains around 300 species, Potentilla roughly 500, and Rubus hundreds, or possibly even thousands of species.

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