Podocarpaceae Endl.
  • Syn. Conif. 203. (1847) 


Cite taxon page as 'WFO (2025): Podocarpaceae Endl. Published on the Internet;http://www.worldfloraonline.org/taxon/wfo-7000000484. Accessed on: 04 Jun 2025'

Local Descriptions

Order descriptions by:

General Information

Trees or shrubs evergreen, dioecious or rarely monoecious. Leaves decussate, subopposite, or spirally arranged; blade scalelike, subulate, or linear to elliptic, stomatal lines abaxial or present on all surfaces. Pollen cones terminal, solitary or clustered in leaf axils, or borne in spikelike complexes; individual cones pedunculate or sessile; microsporophylls numerous, spirally arranged, with distinct adaxial and abaxial surfaces; microsporangia 2; pollen 2(or 3)-saccate in Chinese species, (rarely nonsaccate). Seed-bearing structures terminal or axillary, solitary, occasionally spikelike, comprising few to several spirally arranged bracts; all or only apical bracts fertile, smooth or warty; basal bracts sometimes fused and succulent (together with peduncle) to form a "receptacle," or obsolete; ovule (inverted) or inclined in Chinese species. Seed drupelike or nutlike, wholly or (in Dacrydium) partly enveloped in a sometimes colored and succulent epimatium derived from fertile ovulate scale. Cotyledons 2.

  • Provided by: [A].Flora of China @ efloras.org
    • Source: [
    • 4
    • ]. 

    Morphology

    Plants dioecious or monoecious; male flowers in terminal or axillary strobili, the stamens usually many, the anthers 2-celled; female flower solitary or paired, axillary or terminal, or in strobili with megasporophylls 1-ovuled and bracteate; seed solitary, or paired; cotyledons 2 Trees, or shrubby in some species; leaves persistent, alternate or opposite, or absent and represented by phylloclades, very variable from acicular to broadly lanceolate

  • Provided by: [E].Flora of West Tropical Africa - species descriptions
    • Source: [
    • 1
    • ]. 

    Ovules erect or inverted, with the sterile base of the seed scale complex (epimatium) usually ± folded over the ovule and the base of the bracts and cone axis sometimes swelling to form a fleshy receptacle Trees and shrubs with linear to lanceolate or scale-leaves, usually dioecious, the males with small cones or spikes, the females with the cones small or reduced to 1 or 2 fertile scales

  • Provided by: [D].Plants Of the World Online Portal - FTEA
    • Source: [
    • 2
    • ]. 

    Staminate strobili terminal or axillary, forming single or fascicled usually bracteate catkin-like cones; fertile scales subpeltate, bearing 2 pollen-sacs towards the base of the blade, pollen grains winged Leaves linear, lanceolate, narrowly ovate or more rarely scale-like, spirally arranged and sometimes disposed in one plane or apparently opposite Ovule solitary, erect or inverted, soon becoming enclosed by a secondary integument variously developed from part of the strobilus Female strobilus small with usually only 1 or 2 fertile scales Evergreen trees or shrubs, usually dioecious (always in our area)

  • Provided by: [B].Flora Zambesiaca - descriptions
    • Source: [
    • 3
    • ]. 

    Plantes ligneuses , généralement dioïques, ramifiées, à canaux résinifères; feuilles spiralées, simples écailleuses ou linéaires à lancéolées.'Strobiles'petits et parfois réduits, à sporophylles généralement spiralés et nus.'Écailles staminales'à 2 sacs polliniques sur la face inférieure; grains de pollen ailés et à vésicules latérales.'Écailles ovulifères'à 1 ovule généralement exsert, unitégumenté et entouré ou non d'un épimatium (faux arille).'Graines à testa crustacé ou lignifié, entouré ou non d'un épimatium coriace ou charnu.\n\t\t\tSept genres et 100 espèces sur les montagnes des régions tropicales et dans les régions subtropicales australes.

  • Provided by: [C].Flore d'Afrique Centrale
    • Source: [
    • 12
    • ]. 
    Flore d'Afrique CentraleMorphology

    Plantes ligneuses , généralement dioïques, ramifiées, à canaux résinifères; feuilles spiralées, simples écailleuses ou linéaires à lancéolées.'Strobiles'petits et parfois réduits, à sporophylles généralement spiralés et nus.'Écailles staminales'à 2 sacs polliniques sur la face inférieure; grains de pollen ailés et à vésicules latérales.'Écailles ovulifères'à 1 ovule généralement exsert, unitégumenté et entouré ou non d'un épimatium (faux arille).'Graines à testa crustacé ou lignifié, entouré ou non d'un épimatium coriace ou charnu.\n\t\t\tSept genres et 100 espèces sur les montagnes des régions tropicales et dans les régions subtropicales australes.

    Flora of West Tropical Africa - species descriptionsMorphology

    Plants dioecious or monoecious; male flowers in terminal or axillary strobili, the stamens usually many, the anthers 2-celled; female flower solitary or paired, axillary or terminal, or in strobili with megasporophylls 1-ovuled and bracteate; seed solitary, or paired; cotyledons 2 Trees, or shrubby in some species; leaves persistent, alternate or opposite, or absent and represented by phylloclades, very variable from acicular to broadly lanceolate Trees, or shrubby in some species; leaves persistent, alternate or opposite, or absent and represented by phylloclades, very variable from acicular to broadly lanceolate

    Flora Zambesiaca - descriptionsMorphology

    Staminate strobili terminal or axillary, forming single or fascicled usually bracteate catkin-like cones; fertile scales subpeltate, bearing 2 pollen-sacs towards the base of the blade, pollen grains winged Leaves linear, lanceolate, narrowly ovate or more rarely scale-like, spirally arranged and sometimes disposed in one plane or apparently opposite Ovule solitary, erect or inverted, soon becoming enclosed by a secondary integument variously developed from part of the strobilus Female strobilus small with usually only 1 or 2 fertile scales Evergreen trees or shrubs, usually dioecious (always in our area) Leaves linear, lanceolate, narrowly ovate or more rarely scale-like, spirally arranged and sometimes disposed in one plane or apparently opposite Ovule solitary, erect or inverted, soon becoming enclosed by a secondary integument variously developed from part of the strobilus Female strobilus small with usually only 1 or 2 fertile scales Evergreen trees or shrubs, usually dioecious (always in our area)

    Plants Of the World Online Portal - FTEAMorphology

    Ovules erect or inverted, with the sterile base of the seed scale complex (epimatium) usually ± folded over the ovule and the base of the bracts and cone axis sometimes swelling to form a fleshy receptacle Trees and shrubs with linear to lanceolate or scale-leaves, usually dioecious, the males with small cones or spikes, the females with the cones small or reduced to 1 or 2 fertile scales Trees and shrubs with linear to lanceolate or scale-leaves, usually dioecious, the males with small cones or spikes, the females with the cones small or reduced to 1 or 2 fertile scales

    Flora of China @ efloras.orgGeneral Information

    Trees or shrubs evergreen, dioecious or rarely monoecious. Leaves decussate, subopposite, or spirally arranged; blade scalelike, subulate, or linear to elliptic, stomatal lines abaxial or present on all surfaces. Pollen cones terminal, solitary or clustered in leaf axils, or borne in spikelike complexes; individual cones pedunculate or sessile; microsporophylls numerous, spirally arranged, with distinct adaxial and abaxial surfaces; microsporangia 2; pollen 2(or 3)-saccate in Chinese species, (rarely nonsaccate). Seed-bearing structures terminal or axillary, solitary, occasionally spikelike, comprising few to several spirally arranged bracts; all or only apical bracts fertile, smooth or warty; basal bracts sometimes fused and succulent (together with peduncle) to form a "receptacle," or obsolete; ovule (inverted) or inclined in Chinese species. Seed drupelike or nutlike, wholly or (in Dacrydium) partly enveloped in a sometimes colored and succulent epimatium derived from fertile ovulate scale. Cotyledons 2.

     Information From

    Flora of China @ efloras.org
    World Flora Online Data. 2024.
    • A Missouri Botanical Garden
    Flora Zambesiaca - descriptions
    Flora Zambesiaca
    • B
    Flore d'Afrique Centrale
    • C http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
    Plants Of the World Online Portal - FTEA
    World Flora Online Data. 2024.
    • D
    Flora of West Tropical Africa - species descriptions
    World Flora Online Data. 2024.
    • E The Trustees of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew
    Podocarpaceae
    https://about.worldfloraonline.org/tens/conifers
    World Flora Online Data. 2022.
    • F CC0 1.0 Universal (CC0 1.0).
    World Flora Online consortium
    http://www.worldfloraonline.org/organisation/WFO
    World Flora Online Data. 2024.
    • G All Rights Reserved
    • H CC0 1.0 Universal (CC0 1.0).