Plant Classification and How It Works
Posted By American Meadows Content Team on Sep 27, 2012 · Revised on Oct 28, 2025
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Posted By American Meadows Content Team on Sep 27, 2012 · Revised on Oct 28, 2025
Here's a quick explanation of how plants are classified from Kingdom, the highest division, all the way to Variety, the lowest. Remember, a common wildflower like Black-eyed Susan is called Rudbeckia hirta. Rudbeckia is the Genus name. Hirta is the Species. You’ll find these two sub-divisions way down on this list.
Black-eyed Susan
Rudbeckia hirta
| Kingdom | Plantae – Plants |
| Subkingdom | Tracheobionta – Vascular plants |
| Superdivision | Spermatophyta – Seed plants |
| Division | Magnoliophyta – Flowering plants |
| Class | Magnoliopsida – Dicotyledons |
| Subclass | Asteridae |
| Order | Asterales |
| Family | Asteraceae – Aster family |
| Genus | Rudbeckia – coneflower |
| Species | Rudbeckia hirta – black-eyed Susan |
Source: USDA
Class divides plants into the two large groups, Dicots and Monocots.
A. Dicotyledons (Dicots are plants with two seed leaves. This huge group, with approximately 2/3 of all flowering plants, includes most all wildflowers. Dicots have "net-veined" leaves, which means they have the familiar leaves with center vein plus branching veins running from it.
B. Monocotyledons (Monocots, plants with one seed leaf, are the grasses and other simpler plants, and make up about 1/3 of all flowering plants. Monocots have parallel-veined leaves.)