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Taxonomy - Lupinus arboreus

 Kingdom  Plantae
 Phylum  Tracheophyta
 Class  Angiospermae
 Subclass  Dicotyledonae
 Order  Legumales
 Family  Papilionaceae
 Genus  Lupinus
 Species  arboreus

* Earlier classification systems put lupins in the family rosales

Characteristics

Plantae

These organisms belong to the plant kingdom. They have cells with cellulose cell walls, if the cells are exposed to light then most of them will also contain chlorophyll.

Tracheophyta

These are plants which have conducting tissues (xylem and phloem). The tracheophyta consist consist of two groups, angiosperms and gymnosperms.

Angiospermae

This group consists of the flowering plants, the plants all have flowers though they are not always obvious. They produce seeds which are found inside a fruit. These seeds are formed from fertilisation of ovules which are enclosed in the ovary of the pistil. After ripening the ovary forms the fruit.

Dicotyledonae

These plants have embryos with two seed leaves (2 cotyledons) so when the plant germinates it has two leaves. The veins of the leaves are arranges in a network pattern.

The flowers of dicotyledons have sepals and petals which are arranged in groups of 4 or 5 (or multiples of 4 or 5). Their pollen grains mostly have three furrows or grooves.

Woody stemmed dicotyledons show secondary thickening by growing new rings of xylem. 

Legumales

This group has seeds contained in a pod. Most legumes have specialised root nodules which contain bacteria of the Rhizobium genus which have a mutualistic relationship with the host plant. These bacteria carry out nitrogen fixation converting atmospheric nitrogen into a form which can be absobed from the nodule and used by the plant.

Papilionaceae

This family includes peas, beans, gorse and lupins. They are sometimes referred to as Fabaceae. Members of this family can be recognised by their flowers.

The flower has a large petal at the top, called the banner (or standard) that develops outside of the others before the flower has opened, two lateral petals called wings, and two lower petals that are usually fused to form the keel that encloses the reproductive parts of the flower.

Lupinus

Flowers have a piston arrangement to disperse pollen. The outer stamens (5) act as a piston so that the weight of  the bee as it lands on the keel squeezes pollen through the opening at the tip of the keel. Next the stigma protrudes through the opeing and makes contact with the bee.

arboreus

 

 

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