I was surprised when I saw peanuts on that list. Then I remembered you stating the notable character 'pod'. Such an amazing video, thank you very much. As a plant science student, your videos are creating a great impact in enhancing my knowledge.
Great vídeos! I worked até a Herbarium for most my graduation, at Paraná Brazil, State Univerty of Maringá. Now i'm working with interactions between birds and plants. Fabaceae and Myrtaceae are largely consumed by birds. Your vídeos helped me a lot.
Nicely done! I used to know most plant families at a glance, but that was before the current era of molecular taxonomic revisions and the delusion that all taxa must be monophyletic. I'm trying to relearn plant families in their current constitutions and this was a very useful refresher on what used to be a superfamily. Bauhinia always throws me - those flowers and leaves misdirect my mind, but the pods do come through. Thanks for the very clear and detailed dissections of the assorted flower types - I hope you keep this series on families up.
Thank you and I'm happy to hear that you found this video helpful!😊 It's true that taxonomic revisions might sometimes throw us off, especially if we are used to (or we've learned) a different classification for certain families. There have been many changes in the classification of plants since Linnaeus' times and with more research and new methods in science, this topic is quite dynamic. Bauhinia is so wild with its characters and as you said, the pod is really the only obvious Fabaceae character! The plant family series will continue and there will even be something extra coming up on this topic, so stay tuned! 🤗
Such different repeating flower types in fabaceae, it's like there's completly seperate subfamilies within fabaceae. Afterall it's among the biggest plant families. Have you looked at phylogenic trees? It's wild but fun to see how closely related species are.
Very easily explained. I may add one more characteristic. I think tge seeds inside pods need to be cooked before eating 😅 right? Like pulses, peanuts etc. Unlike walnuts and others. Anyway favorite genus is Acacia. Any Acacia specie without thorns😊
@@natureclearlyTo my experience, they are the trickiest, I think.. Year after year a yellow composite blooms at approximately this time at the backyard of my workplace. I still dont know whether it is a crepis or a hieracium. I have succeeded in narrowing it down up to there, but not more.. No, but I'll check.
Hello from Mexico. Just discovered your channel. Very informative. Thank you.
I was surprised when I saw peanuts on that list. Then I remembered you stating the notable character 'pod'. Such an amazing video, thank you very much. As a plant science student, your videos are creating a great impact in enhancing my knowledge.
Lovely and informative lesson. Thank you.
Wow, these videos are lit! Im doing Agraria in Milan and i'm studiying these things in botanics. U are doing greit!
Thank you thank you so much mam. I see your knowledgeable video regularly. So thanks a lot mam.
Thank you for watching! 🤗
Interesting to note the similarities and differences in this family.
Great vídeos! I worked até a Herbarium for most my graduation, at Paraná Brazil, State Univerty of Maringá. Now i'm working with interactions between birds and plants. Fabaceae and Myrtaceae are largely consumed by birds. Your vídeos helped me a lot.
Worth waiting for your class. One more informative session it's delightful. Thanks
Thank you so much! ❤
Nicely done! I used to know most plant families at a glance, but that was before the current era of molecular taxonomic revisions and the delusion that all taxa must be monophyletic. I'm trying to relearn plant families in their current constitutions and this was a very useful refresher on what used to be a superfamily. Bauhinia always throws me - those flowers and leaves misdirect my mind, but the pods do come through. Thanks for the very clear and detailed dissections of the assorted flower types - I hope you keep this series on families up.
Thank you and I'm happy to hear that you found this video helpful!😊
It's true that taxonomic revisions might sometimes throw us off, especially if we are used to (or we've learned) a different classification for certain families. There have been many changes in the classification of plants since Linnaeus' times and with more research and new methods in science, this topic is quite dynamic.
Bauhinia is so wild with its characters and as you said, the pod is really the only obvious Fabaceae character!
The plant family series will continue and there will even be something extra coming up on this topic, so stay tuned! 🤗
Beautiful and interesting flowers very informative video
Thank you!
Using this as assigned watching for my Plant Systematics lab. Excellent video.
I'm glad it was helpful! 😊 good luck with the class!
Any tips to learn families plz
Okay I’m not familiar with any of these terms so imma go ahead and watch the botany playlist on this channel.
VEry nice video! quite helpful!
Such different repeating flower types in fabaceae, it's like there's completly seperate subfamilies within fabaceae. Afterall it's among the biggest plant families. Have you looked at phylogenic trees? It's wild but fun to see how closely related species are.
Was a lot of this footage taken around UH? I’ve seen most of these plants on campus lol
The footage is from California. Where is UH?
Amazingly different 🎀🎀
Plz upload lectures of all plants families.
Thank you! ❤ there will definitely be videos on more plant families so stay tuned! 😊
I feel like learning plants is like learning English - there are so many exceptions to the rule! 😂
Right?!
Very easily explained. I may add one more characteristic. I think tge seeds inside pods need to be cooked before eating 😅 right? Like pulses, peanuts etc. Unlike walnuts and others. Anyway favorite genus is Acacia. Any Acacia specie without thorns😊
Mam , we need some more videos regarding other family.. to identify the plant
Coming up!
The hardest is to identify the yellow composites, specifically crepis vs. hieracium. AFAIK only their achenes/cypselas are reliably different.
That's true! Yellow composites are very tricky. Have you seen my video on this family? 😊
@@natureclearlyTo my experience, they are the trickiest, I think.. Year after year a yellow composite blooms at approximately this time at the backyard of my workplace. I still dont know whether it is a crepis or a hieracium. I have succeeded in narrowing it down up to there, but not more..
No, but I'll check.
Fabacea plants all look alike in leaves. Makes them hard to distinguish. Julibrissin, gladetsia, etc
and skipping some of the most common with the prime example of the wood sorel that shows the most violent and interesting seed dispersal around
I love plant medicine.
Please do Apocynaceae ♥️
Stay tuned! 😉
😀❤️🌻
Very nice.