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Apg Ii

The APG II from 2003 updated the original 1998 plant classification by proposing changes only when supported by substantial new evidence. It continued seeking broad circumscriptions of taxa and generally accepted specialists' views. APG II extended the use of alternative bracketed taxa, allowing families to be considered separately or together. The main changes included new orders for basal clades, placement of previously unplaced families, and restructuring of several major families.

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106 views1 page

Apg Ii

The APG II from 2003 updated the original 1998 plant classification by proposing changes only when supported by substantial new evidence. It continued seeking broad circumscriptions of taxa and generally accepted specialists' views. APG II extended the use of alternative bracketed taxa, allowing families to be considered separately or together. The main changes included new orders for basal clades, placement of previously unplaced families, and restructuring of several major families.

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Ansev Civas
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APG II (2003)[edit]

The second paper published by the APG presents an update to the original classification
of 1998. The authors say that changes have been proposed only when there is
"substantial new evidence" which supports them. [14]
The proposed classification continues the tradition of seeking broad circumscriptions of
taxa, for example trying to place small families containing only one genus in a larger
group. The authors say that they have generally accepted the views of specialists,
although noting that specialists "nearly always favour splitting of groups" regarded as too
varied in their morphology.[15]
APG II continues and indeed extends the use of alternative 'bracketed' taxa allowing the
choice of either a large family or a number of smaller ones. For example, the
large Asparagaceae family includes 7 'bracketed' families which can either be considered
as part of the Asparagaceae or as separate families. [16]
Some of the main changes in APG II are:

New orders are proposed, particularly to accommodate the 'basal clades' left as
families in the first system.

Many of the previously unplaced families are now located within the system.

Several major families are re-structured.[17]

See also: APG II system


In 2007, a paper was published giving a linear ordering of the families in APG II, suitable
for ordering herbarium specimens, for example. [18]

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