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{
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"next": "https://treescape.app/api/families/?format=api&page=21",
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{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/families/symplocaceae/?format=api",
"slug": "symplocaceae",
"latin_name": "Symplocaceae",
"description": "Symplocaceae is a family of flowering plants in the order Ericales, including two genera, Symplocos and Cordyloblaste, totalling about 260 known species. The common name for Symplocaceae is sweetleaf. Symplocaceae has a transpacific distribution that covers the Southeast United States, South America, Southeast Asia and Northern Australia. Plants in the family Symplocaceae are generally trees or shrubs, and are found in humid, tropical, montane forests within their range.",
"gbif_id": 6708,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/symplocaceae_thumbnail_A0MtaWQ.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/symplocaceae_thumbnail_kGcWU2W.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/families/tamaricaceae/?format=api",
"slug": "tamaricaceae",
"latin_name": "Tamaricaceae",
"description": "The Tamaricaceae, the tamarisk family, are a family of plants native to drier areas of Europe, Asia, and Africa. It contains four genera: Tamarix (with 73 species), Reaumuria (25 species), Myricaria (13 species), and Myrtama (a single species).\nIn the 1980s, the family was classified in the Violales under the Cronquist system; more modern classifications (Angiosperm Phylogeny Group) place them in the Caryophyllales.\nMany of the plants in the family grow on saline soils, tolerating up to 15,000 ppm soluble salt and can also tolerate alkaline conditions. The leaves are generally scale-like, measure 1–5 mm long, overlap each other along the stem, and in some species are encrusted with salt secretions.",
"gbif_id": 6632,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/tamaricaceae_thumbnail_CWkzGNZ.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/tamaricaceae_thumbnail_Jg1NTIr.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/families/taxaceae/?format=api",
"slug": "taxaceae",
"latin_name": "Taxaceae",
"description": "Mazaceae is a family of plants in the order Lamiales. The family was described by James L. Reveal in 2011. Genera in this family were most recently previously included in Phrymaceae and in older classifications were placed in Scrophulariaceae.\nPlants of the World Online includes four genera:\n\nDodartia Tourn. ex L.\nLancea Hook.f. & Thomson\nMazus Lour.\nPuchiumazus Bo Li, D.G.Zhang & C.L.Xiang\nGermplasm Resources Information Network includes only Lancea and Mazus. The Angiosperm Phylogeny Website includes Dodartia, Lancea, and Mazus.",
"gbif_id": 4863,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/taxaceae_thumbnail_yP49YK7.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/taxaceae_thumbnail_RxiSLtD.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/families/theaceae/?format=api",
"slug": "theaceae",
"latin_name": "Theaceae",
"description": "Theaceae (), the tea family, is a family of flowering plants comprising shrubs and trees, including the economically important tea plant, and the ornamental camellias. It can be described as having from seven to 40 genera, depending on the source and the method of circumscription used. The family Ternstroemiaceae has been included within Theaceae; however, the APG III system of 2009 places it instead in Pentaphylacaceae. Most but not all species are native to China and East Asia.",
"gbif_id": 3189597,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/theaceae_thumbnail_R58xlaf.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/theaceae_thumbnail_Hi1mGEX.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/families/thelypteridaceae/?format=api",
"slug": "thelypteridaceae",
"latin_name": "Thelypteridaceae",
"description": "Thelypteridaceae is a family of about 900 species of ferns in the order Polypodiales. In the Pteridophyte Phylogeny Group classification of 2016 (PPG I), it is placed in the suborder Aspleniineae. Alternatively, the family may be submerged in a very broadly defined family Aspleniaceae as the subfamily Thelypteridoideae.\nThe ferns are terrestrial, with the exception of a few which are lithophytes (grow on rocks). The bulk of the species are tropical, although there are a number of temperate species.\nThese ferns typically have creeping rhizomes. The fronds are simply pinnate to pinnate-pinnatifid. There is either no frond dimorphism or only mild dimorphism, either open venation or very simple anastomosing. The sori are mostly reniform in shape and have indusia, except for the Phegopteris group.",
"gbif_id": 6618,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/thelypteridaceae_thumbnail_SwsnnuR.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/thelypteridaceae_thumbnail_mW19tDn.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/families/thesiaceae/?format=api",
"slug": "thesiaceae",
"latin_name": "Thesiaceae",
"description": "The Santalaceae, sandalwoods, are a widely distributed family of flowering plants (including small trees, shrubs, perennial herbs, and epiphytic climbers) which, like other members of Santalales, are partially parasitic on other plants. Its flowers are bisexual or, by abortion (\"flower drop\"), unisexual. Modern treatments of the Santalaceae include the family Viscaceae (mistletoes), previously considered distinct.\nThe APG II system of 2003 recognises the family and assigns it to the order Santalales in the clade core eudicots. However, the circumscription by APG is much wider than accepted by previous classifications, including the plants earlier treated in families Eremolepidaceae and Viscaceae. It includes about 1,000 species in 43 genera. Many have reported traditional and cultural uses, including as medicine.",
"gbif_id": 4935842,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/thesiaceae_thumbnail_fFajlh7.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/thesiaceae_thumbnail_bMbqWuM.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/families/tropaeolaceae/?format=api",
"slug": "tropaeolaceae",
"latin_name": "Tropaeolaceae",
"description": "Tropaeolum , commonly known as nasturtium (; literally \"nose-twister\" or \"nose-tweaker\"), is a genus of roughly 80 species of annual and perennial herbaceous flowering plants. It was named by Carl Linnaeus in his book Species Plantarum, and is the only genus in the family Tropaeolaceae. The nasturtiums received their common name because they produce an oil similar to that of watercress (Nasturtium officinale).\nThe genus Tropaeolum, native to South and Central America, includes several very popular garden plants, the most common being T. majus, T. peregrinum and T. speciosum. One of the hardiest species is T. polyphyllum from Chile, the perennial roots of which can survive the winter underground at elevations of 3,300 metres (11,000 ft).\nPlants in this genus have showy, often intensely bright flowers and rounded, peltate (shield-shaped) leaves with the petiole in the centre. The flowers are bisexual and zygomorphic, with five petals, a superior three-carpelled ovary, and a funnel-shaped nectar spur at the back, formed by modification of one of the five sepals.",
"gbif_id": 6696,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/tropaeolaceae_thumbnail_tHoKLIo.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/tropaeolaceae_thumbnail_bTyGSAv.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/families/turneraceae/?format=api",
"slug": "turneraceae",
"latin_name": "Turneraceae",
"description": "Turneraceae Kunth ex DC. () was a family of flowering plants consisting of 120 species in 10 genera. The Cronquist system placed the Turneracids in the order Violales, but it is not currently recognized as a family by the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group in the APG III system of 2009, which includes the taxa in the Turneraceae in Passifloraceae as a subfamily (Turneroideae).",
"gbif_id": 2377,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/turneraceae_thumbnail_Mzwv8ms.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/turneraceae_thumbnail_WQI9IWH.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/families/typhaceae/?format=api",
"slug": "typhaceae",
"latin_name": "Typhaceae",
"description": "The Typhaceae () are a family of flowering plants, sometimes called the cattail family. The botanical name for the family has been recognized by most taxonomists.",
"gbif_id": 4246,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/typhaceae_thumbnail_qwb3ob8.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/typhaceae_thumbnail_JgNGHUE.jpg"
},
{
"url": "https://treescape.app/api/families/ulmaceae/?format=api",
"slug": "ulmaceae",
"latin_name": "Ulmaceae",
"description": "The Ulmaceae () are a family of flowering plants that includes the elms (genus Ulmus), and the zelkovas (genus Zelkova). Members of the family are widely distributed throughout the north temperate zone, and have a scattered distribution elsewhere except for Australasia.\nThe family was formerly sometimes treated to include the hackberries, (Celtis and allies), but an analysis by the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group suggests that these genera are better placed in the related family Cannabaceae. It generally is considered to include ca 7 genera and about 45 species. Some classifications also include the genus Ampelocera.",
"gbif_id": 2382,
"image_thumbnail": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/thumbnails/ulmaceae_thumbnail_3HKW0Qh.jpg",
"image_large": "https://treescape.app/media/plant_species/images/large/ulmaceae_thumbnail_BKxyp0N.jpg"
}
]
}