ericaceous 



(ADDITIONS) 



Fruit-bodies 



turn, Warming's teim for a plant- 

 association of Eguisetum, 

 erica'ceous, heath-like, or allied to 



the genus Erica. 

 erice'tinous, "growing on heaths" 



(Heinig). 



eri'nous(er, em.ahedgehog), "prickly, 



rough with sharp points " (Heinig). 



Escape', a cultivated plant found 



growing as though wild, dispersed 



by some agency. 



etnnobotan'ic (edvos, a tribe, pordvri, 

 a herb), relating to those plants 

 which illustrate or are typical of 

 the customs of a given race or 

 people. 



e'tiolative, tending to disease ; etio- 



log'ical, connected with AETIOLOGY. 



eupot'amic (Trora^os, a river), applied 



to the plankton of running or 



standing inland waters (Zimmer). 



Euthal'lopnytes, Engler's term for 



THALLOPHYTES exclusive of Myxo- 



gastres. 



Excoria'tion (ex, out of, corium, skin), 

 the falling off of the outer layer of 

 the terminal cells of glandular or 

 capitate hairs, as in Geranium 

 (Heinig) ; Excortica'tion (corticatus, 

 covered with bark), the stripping 

 of bark. 



Ex'it, the inner aperture of the slit 

 of a sterna ; in Germ. "Ausgang." 

 Ex'ocarp, Exocar'pium (w, outside, 

 KapTros, fruit), the outer layer of a 

 pericarp ; Exomer'istem ( + MERI- 

 STEM), Russow's term for the 

 meristem which produces all the 

 tissues of a Moss outside the 

 central-strand, namely cortex and 

 epidermis (Vaizey) ; Exopleu'ra 

 (TrXeupa, the side) = TESTA (Heinig) ; 

 Exot'ism, a shortened form of 

 Exot'icism, the condition of non- 

 nativity, introduced from abroad. 

 Explodiflo'rae (explodo, I drive off, 

 flos, floris, a flower), Delpino's 

 term for wind-fertilized flowers 

 which expel their pollen by an 

 explosive action. 



exrapnid'ian (ex = without, + 

 RAPHIS), destitute of raphides 

 (Gulliver). 



ex'tra-xylem'ic ( 4- XYLEM), outside 

 the xylem (iloulet). 



Exu'sion, Berkeley's term for EXU- 

 DATION. 



fa'cial, applied to a hilum which is 

 on the side and not on the margin 

 of a seed (Heinig). 

 Fan, an equivalent of RHIPIDIUM. 

 FasergTiibchen (Germ.) CRYPTO- 



STOMATA. 



Fi'brotype (fibra, a filament, typus, a 

 type), Macdougal's expression for 

 the condition of a root of Ceplialan- 

 thera with a reduction and fusion 

 of the stelar compounds, and radi- 

 ally elongated cortex. 

 Filial-cell, Henfrey's term for 



Daughter-cell. 



filicin'ean, relating to the Filicineae, 

 that is, Ferns in the widest sense 

 (Scott). 



flmic'olous (fimus, dung, colo, I in- 

 habit), growing on manure-heaps. 

 Fi'niform (finis, a boundary, + 

 FORM), a form whose nearest re- 

 lations have completely died out 

 (Kuntze). 



Fissipar'ity = FISSIPARISM. 

 Flo'ral-leaf, suggested equivalent for 

 the Germ. " Hochblatt " ; a bract, 

 fluorescigen'ic ( + FLUORESCENCE, 

 yevos, offspring), causing fluores- 

 cence, as certain bacteria. 

 Fo'liole, Fol'iola, add, (2) employed by 

 Spruce for the postical leaves of 

 Hepaticae, those on the ventral or 

 rooting surface ; fo'liose, applied 

 to a Lichen with a leaf-like ex- 

 pansion of the thallus. 

 Fore-leaf, a translation of the Germ. 

 ' ' Vorblatt " ; a bracteole or pro- 

 phyllum. 



Form, nearly thirty special terms 

 are enumerated by 0. Kuntze in 

 his " Methodik der Speciesbe- 

 schreibung," pp. 15-17. 

 Founda'tion, a literal rendering of the 



Germ. " Anlage." 

 Front cav'ity, the outer cavity of a 



stoma ; in Germ. " Vorhof." 

 Fruit-bear'er, Potter's term for 

 CARPOPHORE ; <- -bodies, (1) 



308 



