Anaphyte 



Androgametangium 



branch or shoot ; Anaphyto'sis, the 

 building up of plant structure by 

 Anaphytes. 



An'aplast (ir\o<rTby, moulded), A. 

 Meyer's term forLEucoPLASTiD; Ana- 

 sar'oa {<rdp^, aapKhs, flesh), dropsy in 

 plants. 



anasohis'tie (a;/o, up. ; <rxi<Trhs, cleft), 

 used of chromosomes which split 

 longitudinally ; cf. diaschistic 

 (Farmer); Anasor'iam {<ra>phs, a 

 heap), the building up of nutritive 

 material in the protoplasm, but not 

 an integral part of it (Hartog) ; 

 anastat'ic {(xrdffis, a standing), 

 reviving, as certain plants after 

 desiccation. 



Anast'ates, pi. {audffTaros, removed), 

 the products of anabolic or ascend- 

 ing conversion of food-material into 

 protoplasm (Parker). 



Anastomo'sis {avaffronou, I form a 

 mouth), (1) union of one vein with 

 another, the connection forming a 

 reticulation ; (2) Vuillemin's term 

 for conjugation in Mucor, two 

 equal gametes conjugate and are 

 cut off from the parent hypha by 

 a septum. 



Anataximorph'osis (ava, up ; To|iy, 

 order ; fiap<p}), change), Gubler's term 

 for teratologic changes which are in 

 conformity with the normal order ; 

 Anat'omy (to/x^s, cutting) in botany, 

 the study of structure ; anat'ropal, 

 more correctly anat'ropons, anat'- 

 ropus [rpoTTij, a turn), the ovule 

 reversed, with niicropyle close to 

 the side of the hilum, and the 

 chalaza at the opposite end ; an- 

 atyp'ic (tuttos, a type), apDlied to 

 an anomaly which conforms to the 

 general law of the organism ; Ana- 

 ty'pose, an anomaly of the kind 

 specified (Gubler). 



An'bury, Am'berry, a disease caused by 

 Plasmodiophora Brassicae, Woron., 

 in Crucifers, the root becoming 

 clubbed. 

 Anc'ad (ii7«os, mountain glen, + ad) 



a canon plant. 

 an'ceps (Lat., two-headed), ancip'ital, 

 ancip'itous, two-edged, flattened or 



compressed, as the stem of Sisym- 

 brium a'ficeps, Cav. 



anohor'aeform {anchora, an anchor ; 

 fonna, shape), with two limbs, as in 

 the petals of A nkyropetaluTn, Fenzl ; 

 Anc'hor-hairs, hairs having recurved 

 barbs, distinctive of the Loasaceae ; 

 Anc'horing Disk, a growth from 

 rhizoids in Lejeunia ; —Or'gan, the 

 ends of tendrils with flattened disks 

 for clinging ; '-' Koot, holdfasts such 

 as those of Iledera. for support, not 

 nourishment (Goebel). 



Anchu'sin, the colouring matter of 

 Anchusa tinctoria, Linn., now re- 

 ferred to the genus Alkanna. 



ancis'trus {ayKiarpiov, a small hook), 

 barbed. 



Anci'um, pi. Anci'a {^yKos, a hollow, 

 as a glen), a canon forest formation ; 

 ancoph'ilus ((|)iA.€a), I love), haunt- 

 ing canons ; Ancophy'ta (^urbv, a 

 plant), plants of canons ; an- 

 coc'olus, i. e. ancoc'ola, living in 

 cahons (Clements). 



ander, -dra, -dro, -drum {av))p, dvdphs, 

 a man), in Greek compounds = the 

 maie^ sex ; An'drochore {xop^w, I 

 spread abroad), a plant dispersed by 

 human agency ; Androclin'ium 

 {k\iv^, bed), the bed of the anther 

 in Orchids, an excavation on the 

 top of the column, usually written 

 Clinandrium. 



Androconid'ium ( -f Conidium), term 

 propounded by Colin for a sperma- 

 tium of assumed male function ; 

 An'drocyte Uvros, hollow vessel), 

 the cell which afterwards develops 

 into the antherozoid (Allen); andi'O- 

 dioe'cious (51s twice ; oIkos, house), 

 used of a species witli two forms, 

 one male only, the other hermafhro- 

 dite ; Androdioec'lfim, the condition 

 itself ; androdynam'ic, = axduody- 

 NAMous ; andrody'namous {Svvanis, 

 power), of Dicotyledons in which the 

 stamens are highly developed ; An- 

 droe'cium {oIkos, house), the male 

 system of a flower, the stamens 

 collectively ; androe'cial, relating 

 to an androeciuni ; Androgametan'- 

 gium {ya/x(Tr}s, a spouse ; 0776*0;', 



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