#family_Moraceae__Moraceae__mulberry_family trees or shrubs having a milky juice; in some classifications includes genus Cannabis
supertype: dicot_family__dicotfamily__magnoliopsid_family family of flowering plants having two cotyledons (embryonic leaves) in the seed which usually appear at germination
member of: order_Urticales
member: genus_Morus__Morus type genus of the Moraceae: mulberries
member: mulberry_tree__mulberry any of several trees of the genus Morus having edible fruit that resembles the blackberry
member: genus_Maclura__Maclura yellowwood trees or shrubs
member: genus_Artocarpus__Artocarpus evergreen Asiatic trees now grown through the tropics: breadfruit; jackfruit
member: breadfruit_tree__breadfruit__Artocarpus_communis__Artocarpus_altilis native to Pacific Islands and having edible fruit with a texture like bread
member: jackfruit_tree__jackfruittree__jackfruit__Artocarpus_heterophyllus East Indian tree cultivated for its immense edible fruit and seeds
member: marang_tree__marang__Artocarpus_odoratissima Philippine tree similar to the breadfruit tree bearing edible fruit
member: genus_Ficus__Ficus large genus of tropical trees or shrubs or climbers including fig trees
member: fig_tree__figtree any moraceous tree of the tropical genus Ficus; produces a closed pear-shaped receptacle that becomes fleshy and edible when mature
member: golden_fig__Florida_strangler_fig__strangler_fig__stranglerfig__wild_fig__Ficus_aurea a strangler tree native to southern Florida and West Indies; begins as an epiphyte eventually developing many thick aerial roots and covering enormous areas
member: sycamore_fig__sycamore__mulberry_fig__Ficus_sycomorus thick-branched wide-spreading tree of Africa and adjacent southwestern Asia often buttressed with branches rising from near the ground; produces cluster of edible but inferior figs on short leafless twigs; the Biblical sycamore
member: genus_Broussonetia__Broussonetia paper mulberry
member: paper_mulberry__papermulberry__Broussonetia_papyrifera shrubby Asiatic tree having bark (tapa) that resembles cloth; grown as a shade tree in Europe and America; male flowers are pendulous catkins and female are urn-shaped followed by small orange-red aggregate berries
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