'J4 



FLOWEKS. 



[SECTION 8. 



to the base, and outspread. The nature of such a corolla (and of the sta- 



mrns also, to he explained in the next section) is illustrated by the flower 



of a Lobelia, Fit:. ^f>. 



268. In Asters, Daisies, Sunflower, Coreopsis (Fig. 268), and the like. 



only the marginal (or Ray) corollas are ligulate ; the rest (those of the 



Disk) ar regularly gamopetalous, 

 tubular, aud u've-lobed at summit ; 

 but they are small and individually 

 inconspicuous, only the ray-Jtuicers 

 making a show. In fact, those of 

 Coreopsis and of Sunflower are 

 simply for show, these ray-flowers 

 being not only sterile, but neutral, 

 that is, having neither stamens 

 nor pistil. But in Asters, Daisies, 



Golden-rods, aud the like, these ray-flowers are pistillate and fertile, serving 



therefore for seed-bearing as well as for show. Let it not be supposed that 

 the show is useless. See Section XIII. 



260. Adnation, or Consolidation, is the union of the members of parts 

 belonging to dim-rent circles of the flower (256). It is of course under- 

 stood that in this (as likewise in coalescence) the parts are not formed and 

 then conjoined, bat are produced in union. They are born united, as the 

 term adnate implies. To illustrate this kind of union, take the accompany- 

 ing series of flowers (Fig. 270-274), shown in vertical section. In the 

 first, Fig. 270, Flax-flower, there is no adnation ; sepals, petals, and sta- 

 mens, are free as well as distinct, being separately borne on the receptacle, 

 one circle within or above the next ; only the five pistils have their ovaries 

 coalescent. In Fig. 271, a Cherry flower, the petals aud stamens are borne 

 on the throat of the calyx-tube ; that is, the sepals are coalescent into a cup, 

 and the petals and stamens are adnate to the inner face of this; in other 



FIG. 2GS. Head of flowers of a Coreopsis, divided lengthwise. 



FIG. 269. A slice of the preceding more enlarged, with one tubular perfect flower 

 (a) left standing on the receptacle, with its bractlet or chaff (i), one ligulate, and 

 neutral ray-flower (cc), and part of another; dd, section of bracts or leaves of the 

 involucre. 



