Poales


The Poales are a large order of flowering plants in the monocotyledons, and includes families of plants such as the grasses, bromeliads, and sedges. Sixteen plant families are currently recognized by botanists to be part of Poales.

Description

The flowers are typically small, enclosed by bracts, and arranged in inflorescences. The flowers of many species are wind pollinated; the seeds usually contain starch.

Taxonomy

The APG III system accepts the order within a monocot clade called commelinids, and accepts the following 16 families:
The earlier APG system adopted the same placement of the order, although it used the spelling "commelinoids". It did not include the Bromeliaceae and Mayaceae, but had the additional families Prioniaceae, Sparganiaceae, and Hydatellaceae.
The morphology-based Cronquist system did not include an order named Poales, assigning these families to the orders Bromeliales, Cyperales, Hydatellales, Juncales, Restionales and Typhales.
In early systems, an order including the grass family did not go by the name Poales but by a descriptive botanical name such as Graminales in the Engler system and in the Hutchinson system, Glumiflorae in the Wettstein system or Glumaceae in the Bentham & Hooker system.

Evolution and phylogeny

The earliest fossils attributed to the Poales date to the late Cretaceous period about million years ago, though some studies suggest the origin of the group may extend to nearly 115 million years ago, likely in South America. The earliest known fossils include pollen and fruits.
The phylogenetic position of Poales within the commelinids was difficult to resolve, but an analysis using complete chloroplast DNA found support for Poales as sister group of Commelinales plus Zingiberales. Major lineages within the Poales have been referred to as bromeliad, cyperid, xyrid, graminid, and restiid clades. A phylogenetic analysis resolved most relationships within the order but found weak support for the monophyly of the cyperid clade. The relationship between Centrolepidaceae and Restoniaceae within the restiid clade remains unclear; the first may actually be embedded in the latter.

Diversity

The four most species-rich families in the order are:

Cyperales

Cyperales was a name for an order of flowering plants. As used in the Engler system and in the Wettstein system it consisted of only the single family. In the Cronquist system it is used for an order and circumscribed as :
The APG system now assigns the plants involved to the order Poales.

Eriocaulales

Eriocaulales is a botanical name for an order of flowering plants. The name was published by Takenoshin Nakai. In the Cronquist system the name was used for an order placed in the subclass Commelinidae. The order consisted of one family only :
The APG IV system now assigns these plants to the order Poales.

Uses

The Poales are the most economically important order of monocots and possibly the most important order of plants in general. Within the order, by far the most important family economically is the family of grasses, which includes the starch staples barley, maize, millet, rice, and wheat as well as bamboos, and a few "seasonings" like sugarcane and lemongrass. Graminoids, especially the grasses, are typically dominant in open habitats like prairie/steppe and savannah and thus form a large proportion of the forage of grazing livestock. Possibly due to pastoral nostalgia or simply a desire for open areas for play, they dominate most Western yards as lawns, which consume vast sums of money in upkeep. Many Bromeliaceae are used as ornamental plants. Many wetland species of sedges, rushes, grasses, and cattails are important habitat plants for waterfowl, are used in weaving chair seats, and were important pre-agricultural food sources for man. Two sedges, chufa and water chestnut are still at least locally important wetland starchy root crops.