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Plant Systematics and Diversity

Plant systematics names, classifies, and reconstructs the evolutionary relationships of the green plant lineages, organizing the staggering diversity of mosses, ferns, conifers, and flowering plants into a coherent tree of life.

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Definition

Plant systematics is the scientific study of the diversity of plants and their evolutionary relationships, encompassing identification, nomenclature, classification, and phylogeny.

Scope

This area covers the principles of plant classification and phylogenetics, the evolutionary history of the major land-plant groups, and the diversity of the flowering plants, including the modern phylogeny-based classification systems.

Sub-topics

Core questions

  • How are plants classified, and how are their evolutionary relationships inferred?
  • What are the major lineages of land plants and how did they arise?
  • What accounts for the enormous diversity of the flowering plants?

Key theories

Phylogenetic classification
Modern classification aims to group plants into clades that reflect shared ancestry, inferred chiefly from molecular data, replacing earlier schemes based on overall similarity.
Common descent of green plants
All land plants form a monophyletic group descended from green algal ancestors, a unifying framework that orders the diversity of mosses, ferns, gymnosperms, and angiosperms.

Clinical relevance

Systematics provides the names and relationships that underpin all plant-based science and industry: it guides the search for new crops and medicines among related species, supports biodiversity conservation, and is essential for identifying useful or toxic plants.

History

Linnaeus established binomial nomenclature and a workable classification in the eighteenth century; twentieth-century systems by Cronquist and others were superseded by the molecular, phylogeny-based classifications of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group.

Key figures

  • Carl Linnaeus
  • Arthur Cronquist
  • Peter F. Stevens

Related topics

Seminal works

  • judd2016
  • apg2016

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between taxonomy and systematics?
Taxonomy focuses on identifying, naming, and classifying organisms, while systematics is the broader study of biological diversity and evolutionary relationships, of which taxonomy is a part.
How are plant relationships determined today?
Relationships are inferred mainly from DNA sequence data analyzed with phylogenetic methods, which group plants into clades by shared ancestry and underpin classifications such as the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group system.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts