The dicotyledons, also known as dicots, are a group of flowering plants whose seed typically has two embryonic leaves or cotyledons. There are around 199,350 species within this group. Flowering plants that are not dicotyledons are monocotyledons, typically having one embryonic leaf.
Dicotyledons are not a monophyletic group, and therefore the names "dicotyledons" and "dicots" are, strictly speaking, deprecated. However, the vast majority of "dicots", do form a monophyletic group called the eudicots or tricolpates. These may be distinguished from all other flowering plants by the structure of their pollen. Other dicotyledons and monocotyledons have monosulcate pollen, or forms derived from it, whereas eudicots have tricolpate pollen, or derived forms, the pollen having three or more pores set in furrows called colpi.
Traditionally the dicots have been called the Dicotyledones (or Dicotyledoneae), at any rank. If treated as a class, as in the Cronquist system, they may be called the Magnoliopsida after the type genus Magnolia. In some schemes, the eudicots are treated as a separate class, the Rosopsida (type genus Rosa), or as several separate classes. The remaining dicots (palaeodicots) may be kept in a single paraphyletic class, called Magnoliopsida, or further divided.
Compared to Monocotyledons
Aside from cotyledon number, other broad differences have been noted between monocots and dicots, although these have proven to be differences primarily between monocots and
eudicots. Many early-diverging dicot groups have "monocot" characteristics such as scattered vascular bundles, trimerous flowers, and non-tricolpate pollen. In addition, some monocots have dicot characteristics such as
reticulated leaf veins.
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Feature
! In monocots
! In dicots
|-
| Number of parts of each flower
| in threes (flowers are trimerous)
| in fours or fives (tetramerous or pentamerous)
|-
| Number of furrows or pores in pollen
| one
| three
|-
| Number of cotyledons (leaves in the seed)
| one
| two
|-
| Arrangement of vascular bundles in the stem
| scattered
| in concentric circles
|-
| Roots
| are adventitious
| develop from the radicle
|-
| Arrangement of major leaf veins
| parallel
|
|}
Classification
APG (Angiosperm Phylogeny Group) vs. Cronquist Classification
The following lists are of the orders formerly placed in the dicots, giving their new placement in the
APG-system and that under the older
Cronquist system, which is still in wide use.
{|class=wikitable width="80%" style="background:transparent;" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" align="left"
!align=left width="40%"|
APG II(polyphyletic)
!align=left width="40%"|
Cronquist system(classis
Magnoliopsida)
|-
|valign="top"|
Amborellaceae
Chloranthaceae
Nymphaeaceae [+ Cabombaceae]
Austrobaileyales
Ceratophyllales
;
Magnoliids
Canellales
Laurales
Magnoliales
Piperales
;
eudicots
Buxaceae [+ Didymelaceae]
Sabiaceae
Trochodendraceae [+ Tetracentraceae]
Proteales
Ranunculales
;Core eudicots
*Aextoxicaceae
*Berberidopsidaceae
*Dilleniaceae
*Gunnerales
*Caryophyllales
*Santalales
*Saxifragales
*;rosids
**Aphloiaceae
**Geissolomataceae
**Ixerbaceae
**Picramniaceae
**Strasburgeriaceae
**Vitaceae
**Crossosomatales
**Geraniales
**Myrtales
**;Eurosids I
***Zygophyllaceae [+ Krameriaceae]
***Huaceae
***Celastrales
***Cucurbitales
***Fabales
***Fagales
***Malpighiales
***Oxalidales
***Rosales
**;Eurosids II
***Tapisciaceae
***Brassicales
***Malvales
***Sapindales
*;Asterids
**Cornales
**Ericales
**;Euasterids I
***Boraginaceae
***Icacinaceae
***Oncothecaceae
***Vahliaceae
***Garryales
***Gentianales
***Lamiales
***Solanales
**;Euasterids II
***Bruniaceae
***Columelliaceae [+ Desfontainiaceae]
***Eremosynaceae
***Escalloniaceae
***Paracryphiaceae
***Polyosmaceae
***Sphenostemonaceae
***Tribelaceae
***Apiales
***Aquifoliales
***Asterales
***Dipsacales
|valign="top"|
::;
Magnoliidae (mostly basal dicots)
:::*
Magnoliales
:::*
Laurales
:::*
Piperales
:::*
Aristolochiales
:::*
Illiciales
:::*
Nymphaeales
:::*
Ranunculales
:::*
Papaverales
::;
Hamamelidae
:::*
Trochodendrales
:::*
Hamamelidales
:::*
Daphniphyllales
:::*
Didymelales
:::*
Eucommiales
:::*
Urticales
:::*
Leitneriales
:::*
Juglandales
:::*
Myricales
:::*
Fagales
:::*
Casuarinales
::;
Caryophyllidae
:::*
Caryophyllales
:::*
Polygonales
:::*
Plumbaginales
::;
Dilleniidae
:::*
Dilleniales
:::*
Theales
:::*
Malvales
:::*
Lecythidales
:::*
Nepenthales
:::*
Violales
:::*
Salicales
:::*
Capparales
:::*
Batales
:::*
Ericales
:::*
Diapensiales
:::*
Ebenales
:::*
Primulales
::;
Rosidae
:::*
Rosales
:::*
Fabales
:::*
Proteales
:::*
Podostemales
:::*
Haloragales
:::*
Myrtales
:::*
Rhizophorales
:::*
Cornales
:::*
Santalales
:::*
Rafflesiales
:::*
Celastrales
:::*
Euphorbiales
:::*
Rhamnales
:::*
Linales
:::*
Polygalales
:::*
Sapindales
:::*
Geraniales
:::*
Apiales
::;
Asteridae
:::*
Gentianales
:::*
Solanales
:::*
Lamiales
:::*
Callitrichales
:::*
Plantaginales
:::*
Scrophulariales
:::*
Campanulales
:::*
Rubiales
:::*
Dipsacales
:::*
Calycerales
:::*
Asterales
|-
|colspan=2|Note: "+ ..." = optionally separate family, that may be split off from the preceding family.
|}
Dahlgren and Thorne systems
In the Dahlgrenff and the Thorne systems the name
Magnoliidae is used for the dicotyledons. This is also the case in some of the systems derived from the Cronquist system. For each system, only the superorders are listed. The sequence of each system has been altered to pair corresponding taxa, although circumscription of superorders with the same name is not always the same. The
Thorne system (1992) is the version of the system as depicted by Reveal.
{| class="wikitable sortable" align="left" style="margin-left:1em"
|+Comparison of the Dahlgren and Thorne systems
!style="background:lightgreen" align="center" | Dahlgren system
!style="background:lightgreen" align="center" | Thorne system
|-
| Magnolianae
Ranunculanae
| Magnolianae
Rafflesianae
|-
| Nymphaeanae
| Nymphaeanae
|-
| Caryophyllanae
| Caryophyllanae
|-
| Theanae
Plumbaginanae
Polygonanae
Primulanae
Ericanae
| Theanae
|-
| Malvanae
| Malvanae
|-
| Violanae
| Violanae
|-
| Rosanae
| Rosanae
|-
| Proteanae
| Proteanae
|-
| Myrtanae
| Myrtanae
|-
| Rutanae
| Rutanae
Celastranae
Geranianae
|-
| Santalanae
| Santalanae
|-
| Balanophoranae
| Santalanae
|-
| Asteranae
| Asteranae
|-
| Solananae
| Solananae
|-
| Cornanae
Vitanae
| Cornanae
Aralianae
|-
| Loasanae
| Loasanae
|-
| Dicotyledons
| Gentiananae
Lamianae
| Gentiananae
|}
References
Category:Plant morphology
Category:Plant taxonomy