26 



HOW PLANTS GROW YI:AR AFTER YEAR. 





Is I 



Avhen most leaves have fallen. Even then we can tell how the leaves were placed, 

 as well as in summer. We have only to notice the leaf-scars : for each fallen leaf 

 has left a scar to mark where its stalk separated from the stem. And in most 

 cases the bud above each scar is now apparent or conspicuous, ready to grow into 

 branches in the spring, and showing plainly the arrangement which these are to 



have. Here, for instance, is a last year's shoot of 

 Ilorsechestnut (Fig. 54), with a large terminal bud on 

 its summit, and with very conspicuous leaf-scars. Is; 

 and just above each is an axillary bud, b. Here the 

 leaves were opposite each other ; so the buds are also, 

 and so will the branches be, unless one of the buds on 

 each joint should fail. Fig. 55 is a similar shoot of a 

 Hickory, with its leaf-scars {I s) and axillary buds 

 (h) alternate, that is, single on the joints and one after 

 another on different sides of the stem ; and these buds 

 when they grow will make alternate branches. 



61. The branching would be more regular than it 

 is, if all the buds grew. But there is not room for 

 all ; so only the stronger ones grow. The rest stand 

 ready to take their place, if those happen to be killed. 

 Sometimes there are more buds than one from the same 

 axil. There are three placed side by side on those 

 shoots of Red Maple Avhich are going to blossom. 

 There are several in a row, one above another, on 

 some shoots of Tartarean Honeysuckle. 

 G2. The appearance of plants, the amount of their branching, and the way in 

 which they continue to grow, depend very much upon their character and duration. 



63. The L-urafion of PltinlS of different kinds varies greatly. Some live only for a 

 few months or a few weeks ; others may endure for more than a thousand years. 

 The most famihar division of plants according to their duration and. character is 

 into Hcrhs, Shrubs^ and Trees. 



64. Herbs are pUmts of soft texture, having little wood in their stems, and in our 

 climate dying down to the ground, or else dying root and all, in or before Avinter. 



65. Shrubs are plants with M'oody stems, which endure and grow year after year, 

 but do not rise to any great height, say to not more tlian four or five times the 



