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Amygdaloideae is a subfamily within the family . It was formerly considered by some authors to be separate from Rosaceae, and the family names Prunaceae and Amygdalaceae have been used. Reanalysis from 2007 has shown that the previous definition of subfamily Spiraeoideae was . To solve this problem, a larger subfamily was defined that includes the former Amygdaloideae, , and . This subfamily, however, is to be called Amygdaloideae rather than Spiraeoideae under the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants as updated in 2011.

(2025). 9783874294256, A.R.G. Gantner Verlag KG. .
Article 19.5, ex. 5

As traditionally defined, the Amygdaloideae includes such commercially important crops as , , , , and . The of these plants are known as stone fruit (), as each fruit contains a hard shell (the ) called a stone or pit, which contains the single seed.

The expanded definition of the Amygdaloideae adds to these commercially important crops such as and that have fruit, and also important ornamental plants such as and that have hard dry fruits.


Taxonomic history
The name Prunoideae is sometimes used, but is incorrect. The 1835 publication of that name by Gilbert Thomas Burnett (Burnett) is invalid because it lacks a description (or diagnosis or reference to an earlier description or diagnosis). Paul Fedorowitsch Horaninow (Horan.) published the name in 1847, but Amygdaloideae, published in 1832 by George Arnott Walker-Arnott, has priority and is therefore the correct name.

The taxonomy of this group of plants within the Rosaceae has recently been unclear. In 2001 it was reported that Amygdaloideae consists of two distinct genetic groups or "", Maddenia and . Further refinement Note that this publication pre-dates the 2011 International Botanical Congress which mandates that the combined subfamily referred to in the paper as Spiraeoideae must be called Amygdaloideae. shows that ExochordaOemleriaPrinsepia is somewhat separate from PrunusMaddeniaPygeum, and that the traditional subfamilies and must be included in Amygdaloideae if a is to be avoided. With this classification, the genus Prunus is considered to include Armeniaca, Cerasus, Amygdalus, Padus, Laurocerasus, Pygeum, and Maddenia.

alluded to the merging of Amygdalaceae into Rosaceae in his poem The Rose Family, when he wrote "The rose is a rose and was always a rose / But the theory now goes that the apple's a rose, / and the pear is, and so's the plum, I suppose." In the next line he wrote, "The dear i.e., only knows what will next prove a rose." This referred to shifting botanical opinion which had recently reunited Amygdalaceae, Spiraeaceae, and Malaceae into Rosaceae (which matches de Jussieu's 1789 classification).


Classification
A recent classification places the following genera in the subfamily:


External links
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