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A parasitic plant is one that derives some or all of its sustenance from another plant. About 4,100 species in approximately 19 families of flowering plants are known.[1] Parasitic plants have a modified root, the haustorium, that penetrates the host plant and connects to the xylem, phloem, or both. Parasitic plants are characterized as follows:
For hemiparasites, one from each of the three sets of terms can be applied to the same species, e.g.
Holoparasites are always obligate so only two terms are needed, e.g. Plants usually considered holoparasites include broomrape, dodder, Rafflesia, and Hydnoraceae. Plants usually considered hemiparasites include Castilleja, mistletoe, Western Australian Christmas tree and yellow rattle.
[edit] Host rangeSome parasitic plants are generalists and parasitize many different species, even several different species at once. Dodder (Cuscuta spp., Cassytha spp.) and red rattle (Odontites verna) are generalist parasites. Other parasitic plants are specialists that parasitize a few or even just one species. Beech drops (Epifagus virginiana) is a root holoparasite only on American Beech (Fagus grandifolia). Rafflesia is a holoparasite on the vine Tetrastigma. [edit] Importance
[edit] Plants parasitic on fungiAbout 400 species of flowering plants and one gymnosperm (Parasitaxus usta), are parasitic on mycorrhizal fungi. They are termed myco-heterotrophs rather than parasitic plants. Some myco-heterotrophs are Indian pipe (Monotropa uniflora), snow plant (Sarcodes sanguinea), underground orchid (Rhizanthella gardneri), bird's nest orchid (Neottia nidus-avis) and sugarstick (Allotropa virgata). [edit] References
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