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The most well known Maloideae are apples and pears.
Pears are in the subfamily Maloideae with apples.
An earlier intermediate classification expanded Maloideae to include four genera with dry non-pome fruit.
A traditional circumscription of Maloideae includes the following genera:
Apples are in the group Maloideae.
Many species in the Maloideae, such as hawthorns and rowans, produce their flowers in corymbs.
In 2007, the subfamily was made much larger, to include plants that were previously placed in subfamilies Amygdaloideae and Maloideae.
Several genera are an alternate host of Gymnosporangium rust, which damages apples and other related trees in the subfamily Maloideae.
The Maloideae C.Weber was the apple subfamily, a grouping used by some taxonomists within the rose family, Rosaceae.
Earlier circumscriptions of Maloideae are more-or-less equivalent to subtribe Malinae or to tribe Maleae.
The Maloideae (which is a Latin plural form) is a traditional name for a subfamily of plants in the rose family (Rosaceae).
'Firethorn' ('Pyracantha') is a genus of thorny evergreen large shrubs in the family Rosaceae, subfamily Maloideae.
The family was traditionally divided into four subfamilies: Rosoideae, Spiraeoideae, Maloideae, and Amygdaloideae, primarily diagnosed by the structure of the fruits.
Recently it has been shown that the Maloideae are a part of the traditional subfamily Amygdaloideae, and most botanists no longer use the name Maloideae.
It has been place in subfamily Maloideae, but recent molecular evidence places all of (the former) subfamily Maloideae inside subfamily Amygdaloideae.
Recent molecular phylogenetic evidence has shown that the traditional Spiraeoideae and Amygdaloideae form part of the same clade as the traditional Maloideae, and the correct name for this group is Amygdaloideae.
Recent molecular data have shown that the traditional subfamily Spiraeoideae is paraphyletic, and to best reflect relationships subfamily Amygdaloideae has been expanded to include the former Spiraeoideae and Maloideae.
Subfamily Amygdaloideae: Within this group remains an identified clade with a pome fruit, traditionally known as subfamily Maloideae (or Pyroideae) which included genera such as apple, cotoneaster, hawthorn, etc.
Reanalysis from 2007 has shown that the previous definition of subfamily Spiraeoideae was paraphyletic, To solve this problem, a larger subfamily was defined that includes the former Spiraeoideae and Maloideae.
Further refinement shows that Exochorda-Oemleria-Prinsepia is somewhat separate from Prunus-Maddenia-Pygeum, and that the traditional subfamilies Maloideae and Spiraeoideae must be included in Amygdaloideae if a paraphyletic group is to be avoided.
Gymnosporangium is a genus of heteroecious plant-pathogenic fungi which alternately infect members of the family Cupressaceae, primarily species in the genus Juniperus (junipers), and members of the family Rosaceae in the subfamily Maloideae (apples, pears, quinces, shadbush, hawthorns, rowans and their relatives).