order of dicotyledonous flowering plants that constitute two families: Proteaceae, with 75 genera and 1,300 species confined predominantly to the Southern Hemisphere, mostly in Australia, South Africa, and Madagascar; and Elaeagnaceae, with 3 genera and 45 species in north temperate regions, tropical Asia, and Australia. The members of the family Proteales are woody trees and shrubs. The plants are characterized by flowers that are usually individually small but that are combined into dense, often showy inflorescences (clusters). They have a four-parted perianth (whorl of petallike parts) with the four stamens (male pollen-producing structures) located on the tips of the perianth segments, sometimes with only the anther (pollen sac) exposed. The usually simple or much-divided leaves are typically alternately arranged and are often covered thickly with hairs or have a thick cuticle, adaptations that help retard water loss. The plants typically grow in regions that have a long dry season each year. Buffalo berry (Shepherdia argentea) The chief genera of the Proteaceae are Grevillea, Protea, Hakea, Helicia, Leucadendron, and Persoonia; and in Elaeagnaceae the genera are Elaeagnus (oleaster), Hippophae, and Shepherdia (buffalo berry; see photograph). In warm regions several species of the Proteaceae are cultivated as ornamentals, including the silver-tree (Leucadendron argenteum), the leaves of which are covered with fine silky hairs; the Australian honeysuckles (Banksia species); the fire bushes, or fire trees (Embothrium species); and the hakeas (Hakea species). The silky oak (Grevillea robusta), native to Australia, is widely grown in warm climates. The Queensland, or Macadamia, nut (Macadamia integrifolia) is grown for its edible seeds.
PROTEALES
Meaning of PROTEALES in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012