Amentiferae Today

Members were grouped together based on a specific suite of reproductive features suited for wind pollination ():

: Most former Amentiferae (oaks, birches, walnuts) are now placed in the order Fagales , which is part of the Rosid I clade. amentiferae

: Flowers are typically unisexual and highly simplified, often lacking petals or having insignificant sepals. Members were grouped together based on a specific

: Fossil evidence indicates that recognizable members of this group emerged primarily in the Late Cretaceous period. Paleobotanical Significance Fossil forms of Amentiferae | Brittonia - Springer Nature Modern Scientific Status

(or Amentaceae) is a historically significant but now largely obsolete botanical group of woody plants characterized by bearing catkins (aments). While once considered a natural evolutionary group, modern molecular phylogenetics has revealed it to be an artificial collection of unrelated families that independently evolved similar wind-pollination traits. Historical Classification and "Canonical" Families

: Almost exclusively woody plants, ranging from small shrubs to massive forest trees. Modern Scientific Status

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