Fagales

The Fagales are an order of flowering plants in the rosid group of dicotyledons, including some of the best-known trees.

Well-known members of Fagales include: beeches, chestnuts, oaks, walnut, pecan, hickory, birches, alders, hazels, hornbeams, she-oaks, and southern beeches.

Fagales include the following seven families, according to the APG III system of classification:[1] Modern molecular phylogenetics suggest the following relationships:[1][citation needed] Cucurbitales (outgroup) Nothofagaceae Fagaceae Myricaceae Juglandaceae Ticodendraceae Betulaceae Casuarinaceae The older Cronquist system only included four families (Betulaceae, Corylaceae, Fagaceae, Ticodendraceae; Corylaceae now being included within Betulaceae); this arrangement is followed by, for example, the World Checklist of selected plant families.

The change is due to studies suggesting the Myricales, so defined, are paraphyletic to the other two groups.

[3] The oldest member of the order is the flower Soepadmoa cupulata preserved in the late Turonian-Coniacian New Jersey amber, which is a mosaic with characteristics characteristic of both Nothofagus and other Fagales, suggesting that the ancestor of all Fagales was Nothofagus-like.