The Thorne system takes an intermediate approach in combining the bulk of the traditional Sterculiaceae ( but not including " Sterculia " itself ) with elements of the traditional Tiliaceae to form the family Byttneriaceae.
12.
He is also commemorated in " Homalomena davidiana " ( Araceae ) and " Harpullia mabberleyana " ( Sapindaceae ), both from New Guinea and " Grewia mabberleyana " ( Tiliaceae ) from Madagascar.
13.
""'Tilioideae " "'is a flowering plant subfamily in the family Malvaceae, though it was formerly considered a large group, placed at family rank and called "'Tiliaceae " '.
14.
It is a cyclopropene fatty acid; these have been found in many plants of the order Malvales ( Sterculiaceae, Malvaceae, Bombaceae and Tiliaceae ), in up to 60 % of seed oil content, depending on the species but also in leaves, roots and shoots.
15.
Numerous phylogenetic studies have revealed that Sterculiaceae, Tiliaceae and Bombacaceae as traditionally defined are APG II systems unite Bombacaceae, Malvaceae " sensu stricto ", Sterculiaceae and Tiliaceae into a more widely circumscribed Malvaceae, i . e ., Malvaceae " sensu lato ".
16.
Numerous phylogenetic studies have revealed that Sterculiaceae, Tiliaceae and Bombacaceae as traditionally defined are APG II systems unite Bombacaceae, Malvaceae " sensu stricto ", Sterculiaceae and Tiliaceae into a more widely circumscribed Malvaceae, i . e ., Malvaceae " sensu lato ".
17.
""'Tilia " "'is a genus of about 30 species of trees family Tiliaceae, but genetic research summarised by the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group has resulted in the incorporation of this genus, and of most of the previous family, into the Malvaceae.
18.
"' Dombeyoideae "'are a subfamily of the Malvaceae in the wide circumscription, as proposed by the APG . Most of the plants placed here were once assembled with more or less related genera in the paraphyletic Sterculiaceae; a lesser number were placed in the Tiliaceae which were also not monophyletic.
19.
The "'Muntingiaceae "'are a family of Cronquist System placed these genera in the family Tiliaceae, with which they share morphological similarities but have no evolutionary affinity . " Muntingia calabura " is widely introduced in tropical regions, because of its edible fruit . " Dicraspidia donnell-smithii " and " Neotessmannia uniflora " are the other two species in the family, the latter only known from herbarium specimens.