The Nymphaeales currently include three families and about 70 to 90 species. This order was not part of the
APG II system's 2003 plant classification (unchanged from the
APG system of 1998), which instead had a broadly circumscribed family
Nymphaeaceae (including
Cabombaceae) unplaced in any order. The
APG III system did separate the Cabombaceae from the Nymphaeaceae and placed them in the order Nymphaeales together with the Hydatellaceae. The family
Hydatellaceae was placed among the monocots in previous systems, but a 2007 study found that the family belongs to the Nymphaeales. In the
APG IV system, Hydatellaceae, Cabombaceae and Nymphaeaceae are the three families included in the Nymphaeales. Some earlier systems, such as Cronquist's system of 1981, often included the
Ceratophyllaceae and
Nelumbonaceae in the Nymphaeales. Although, the
Takhtajan system of 1980 separated the
Nelumbonales, the new order was retained alongside the Nymphaeales in the superorder Nymphaeanae. The
Cronquist system placed the Nymphaeales in subclass
Magnoliidae, in class
Magnoliopsida [=
dicotyledons]. In addition, Cronquist included the
Ceratophyllaceae and split the family Barclayaceae from the Nymphaeaceae. Under the
APG II system, the family Cabombaceae was included within the Nymphaeaceae, but could optionally be recognized separately. As of
APG III, the two families are recognized separately. The
Dahlgren system placed the Nymphaeales with the
Piperales in superorder Nymphaeanae, within subclass Magnoliideae (dicotyledons).
Thorne's 1992 system (and 2000 revision) placed the Nymphaeales as the sole order in the superorder Nymphaeanae within subclass Magnoliideae (=dicotyledons). ==References==