Magnoliophyta

Ovules (and seeds) enclosed within carpels (fruits); the carpels bearing stigmas upon which the pollen lodges. Pollen produced in the anthers of stamens. Carpels and stamens usually surrounded by a perianth; the whole constituting a flower which may be uni- or bi-sexual (= angiosperms) Magnoliophyta
Flowers usually 4- or 5-merous (rarely 3-merous, when the plants are usually branching trees, shrubs or parasitic twiners). Leaf venation usually reticulate. Embryo with 2 cotyledons. Trees, shrubs, herbs, climbers Magnoliopsida
Flowers and fruits arranged on an invaginated floral axis, i.e. a fig Moraceae
Flowers attached to the inner wall of the invaginated floral axis (fig or syconium) Ficus
Climbing plant with adventitious roots. stipules petioles and young stems with soft hairs. Leaves on stems ovate, 1–3 cm long; petiole short; base asymmetric. Leaves on branches bearing fruit larger with 3 veins; petioles 1–2 cm long. Fruit solitary, 40–50 cm long, greyish. Occasionally naturalized. Introd. from Asia Ficus pumilo
Shrub or tree, sometimes epiphytic and strangling in early stages