APOCYNACEAE (Dogbane Family)
Contributed by
David J. Bogler
Plants herbs
(shrubs or trees elsewhere), often with rhizomes or a woody rootstock, or
sometimes lianas. Stems sometimes twining, usually with milky sap. Leaves
opposite or alternate, rarely appearing whorled, simple, or entire. Stipules
absent or inconspicuous. Inflorescences axillary or terminal clusters or
panicles, or the flowers solitary. Flowers perfect, hypogynous, actinomorphic.
Calyces deeply 5-lobed. Corollas 5-lobed, commonly funnel-shaped to
trumpet-shaped, the interior of the tube sometimes with hairs, scalelike
appendages, or outgrowths, the lobes overlapping and contorted (twisted) in bud.
Stamens 5, alternating with the corolla lobes, the filaments short, fused to
the corolla tube, lacking appendages, the anthers forming a close ring around
the stigma, free from the stigma but often more or less held in place by sticky
secretions. Pistil of 2 carpels, these free below but fused above the ovary.
Each ovary superior, 1-locular, with numerous ovules, the placentation
parietal. Style 1 per flower, the stigma capitate or somewhat conical,
sometimes slightly 2-lobed, often relatively large, sometimes with a small,
cuplike wing or other outgrowths. Fruits follicles (berries or capsules
elsewhere), potentially 2 per flower. Seeds usually numerous, glabrous or with
a tuft of silky hairs at the end opposite the attachment point. About 300
genera, about 2,000 species, nearly worldwide, but most diverse in tropical
regions.
The milkweed
family, Asclepiadaceae, is included in the Apocynaceae in some of the recent
botanical literature, but the two groups are treated in the traditional sense
as separate families here. See the treatment of Asclepiadaceae for further
discussion.
A number of
species of Apocynaceae are popular ornamentals in gardens and greenhouses,
including members of some native genera, as well as the exotic genera Allamanda
L. (allamanda), Carissa L. (natal plum), Catharanthus G. Don
(Madagascar periwinkle, rosy periwinkle), Nerium L. (oleander), Pachypodium
Lindl. (pachypodium, Madagascar
palm), Plumeria L. (frangipani), Thevetia L. (yellow oleander),
and Vinca L. (periwinkle). In the tropics, a number of genera include
timber trees and fiber plants. Members of the Apocynaceae contain a diverse
assortment of alkaloids and other compounds. Most of the species are considered
poisonous. Because of this complex biochemistry, some species have been used
medicinally for a variety of ailments. Some of these medicinal uses have been
investigated and have resulted in the development of important pharmaceuticals.
For example, Catharanthus roseus (L.) G. Don is the source of alkaloids
important in the treatment of leukemia and certain cancers; reserpine, which is
used to treat schizophrenia and hypertension, comes from Rauvolfia L.;
and Strophanthus DC. is the source of strophanthin, which is
used in treating heart disease and as a precursor in the manufacture of
cortisone. A number of genera also have been investigated as possible sources
of latex for producing rubber.