Podocarpaceae
\n| Yellow-wood family |
\n\n |
\n| \n\n |
\n| Genera |
\n\nAcmopyle \nAfrocarpus \nDacrycarpus \nDacrydium - Rimu \nFalcatifolium \nHalocarpus \nLagarostrobos - Huon Pine \nLepidothamnus \nManoao \nMicrocachrys \nMicrostrobos \nNageia \nParasitaxus \nPhyllocladus \nPodocarpus - Yellowwood, Totara \nPrumnopitys - Matai \nRetrophyllum \nSaxegothaea \nSundacarpus\n |
\n
A large family of mainly
Southern Hemisphere conifers, with 18-19 genera and about 170-200 species of
evergreen trees and
shrubs. The family is a classic member of the
Antarctic flora, with its main centres of diversity in
Australasia, particularly
New Caledonia,
Tasmania and
New Zealand, and to a slightly lesser extent,
Malesia and
South America (in the latter, primarily in the
Andes mountains). Several genera extend north of the
equator into
Indo-China and/or the
Philippines.
Podocarpus additionally reaches as far north as southern
Japan and southern
China in
Asia and
Mexico in
the Americas, and
Nageia into southern
China and
India. Two genera also occcur in
sub-Saharan Africa, the widespread
Podocarpus and the endemic
Afrocarpus.
One species,
Parasitaxus ustus, is unique as the only known
parasitic conifer. It occurs on
New Caledonia, where it is parasitic on another member of the Podocarpaceae,
Falcatifolium taxoides.
The genus
Phyllocladus, here included in Podocarpaceae on genetic evidence, is treated by some botanists in its own family
Phyllocladaceae.
Reference
\nQuinn, C. J. & Price, R. A. Phylogeny of the Southern Hemisphere Conifers. Proc. Fourth International Conifer Conference 129-136 (2003).
External link
\nGymnosperm Database - Podocarpaceae