Definition of Order aristolochiales

1. Noun. Order of plants distinguished by tubular petaloid perianth and inferior ovary.


Lexicographical Neighbors of Order Aristolochiales

order Andreaeales
order Anguilliformes
order Anoplura
order Anostraca
order Anseriformes
order Anthocerotales
order Anura
order Aphyllophorales
order Aplacophora
order Apodes
order Apodiformes
order Apterygiformes
order Arales
order Araneae
order Araneida
order Aristolochiales
order Artiodactyla
order Aspergillales
order Auriculariales
order Batoidei
order Batrachia
order Belemnoidea
order Bennettitales
order Berycomorphi
order Blastocladiales
order Branchiura
order Bryales
order Campanulales
order Caprimulgiformes
order Carnivora

Literary usage of Order aristolochiales

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. Flora of Pennsylvania by Thomas Conrad Porter (1903)
"Order ARISTOLOCHIALES. 112 dd. Ovary inferior. ... Order ARISTOLOCHIALES. 112 Calyx regular and the sepals as many as the cavities in the ovary. ..."

2. A College Text-book of Botany: Being an Enlargement of the Author's by George Francis Atkinson (1905)
"The sandal\vood family (Santalaceae, example, the bastard toad-flax, Comandra umbellata), widely distributed in North America. 1208. order aristolochiales. ..."

3. A College Text-book of Botany: Being an Enlargement of the Author's by George Francis Atkinson (1905)
"... Comandra umbellata), widely distributed in North America. 1208. Order Aristolochiales.—Herbs or vines with heart- shaped or kidney-shaped leaves. ..."

4. Text-book of Botany and Pharmacognosy by Henry Kraemer (1908)
"order aristolochiales. This order includes two families which are very different in their general habits, (a) The Rafflesiaceae are parasitic herbs that are ..."

5. Applied and Economic Botany: Especially Adapted for the Use of Students in by Henry Kraemer (1914)
"order aristolochiales. This order includes two families which are very different in their general habits, a. The Rafflesiaceae are parasitic herbs that are ..."

6. Applied and Economic Botany for Students in Technical and Agricultural by Henry Kraemer (1916)
"order aristolochiales. This order includes two families which are very different in their general habits, a. The Rafflesiaceae are parasitic herbs that are ..."

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