SoypM 



ueeondary 



"open cups" (Leighlton) ; (2) X the 

 corona of Narcissns (Lindley) ; 

 scyph'ifonn (foi'ma, shape), cup- 

 like ; scyphiph'orous {<popew, I 

 carry), bearing cups ; Scyphog'eny 

 (yevydo), I produce), Morren's term 

 for the production of ascidia ; scy- 

 ph'ose, possessing scyphi ; Scy- 

 ph'ulus, the colesule or Vagini'LE of 

 Hepaticae. 



Soy'tinum {<tkvtivos, leathern), used 

 by Necker to denote an indehiscent 

 pulpy pod, as of the Tamarind. 



scytone'matons, allied to the genus 

 Sci/toncma (Archer) ; Scytone'iniii, 

 a brown pigment peculiar to that 

 group of Algae. 



sea-g^een, glaucous. 



Seam, see Tracheid-seam ; ~ Cells, 

 flat cells with thickened walls, which 

 direct the line of rupture in the 

 stomium of Fern-sporangia (Goebel) ; 

 ~ Nod'ules = Coal-balls. 



Seas'onal Amphichro'matism {-\- 

 Amthichromatism), the production 

 of two differently coloured flowers 

 on the same stock, due to the season 

 (Lindman) ; -^ Heterochro'mEtism 

 (-f Heterochromatism), difierent 

 colours in the flowers of the same 

 inflorescence due to season (Lind- 

 man). 



seba'ceous, seba'ceus (Lat. , a tallow 

 candle), like lumps of tallow. 



sebiferous {sehim, tallow; fero, I 

 bear), bearing vegetable wax or 

 tallow. 



sec'ondary, secundar'iuSy not primary, 

 subordinate ; ~ Bast, the result of 

 the continued activity of the cam- 

 bium, a formation of bast of tlie 

 same essential character as the 

 primary bast, biit not forming a 

 part of the original bundle ; '- 

 Bud, additional to the usual bud, 

 when more than one occurs in or. 

 near the axil; '^ Cor'tez, succes- 

 sive formations of liber or bast 

 within the cortical sheath and 

 primary cortex, exclusive of the 

 secondary cork, phelloderm ; ^ 

 Dei'mogen, formed from the cam- 

 bium and destined to become 



secondary permanent tissue; -^ 

 Emb'ryo-sac, the central utricles of 

 WelwUschia, which correspond to 

 the corpuscula of Couiferae (J. D. 

 Hooker) ; -^ Forma'tions, those 

 formations which have arisen 

 through human interference ; the 

 "Substitute Associations " of "W. G. 

 Smith (Warming) ; -- Fun'^a, a 

 parasite or saprophyte which attacks 

 a plant after it has been injured or 

 Icilled by some other Fungus ; -^ 

 Growth, additional or subsequent to 

 primary growth ; '-' Hy'brid, a 

 hybrid one or both of whose pai ents 

 were also hybrids; -^ Li'ber, = ^ 

 Bast; <-' Medur-lary Rays, those 

 which are intermediate between 

 the primary rays, and do not 

 extend to the pith; -^ Mem'- 

 bers, all those which are deve- 

 loped from the primary members, 

 if borne directly, they are said to 

 be of the first order, if on the 

 latter, of the second order, and so 

 on ; r^ Mer'istem, a cambium 

 which arises in an organ after its 

 first development, by means of 

 which further gi'owth is pos- 

 sible ; -^ Mycelium, rhizoid 

 attachments to the base of the 

 sporophore resembling the normal 

 mycelium ; -' Nu'cleus, the nucleus 

 of the embiyo-sac, resulting from 

 the union of the two polar nuclei ; 

 -^ Pedun'cle, a branch of a many- 

 flowered inflorescence ; --' Pet'iole, 

 the footstalk of a leaflet ; '^ Boot, 

 a lateral root, or a branch from 

 the primary root; --' Scleren' 

 ch'yma consists of elongated pro- 

 senchymatous cells having ligni- 

 fied walls marked with narrow 

 oblique bordered pits; --' Spore, a 

 spore borne on a promycelium or 

 derived from another spore ; '-' 

 Struc'ture^ (1) any structure not 

 primary, or (2) after it has grown 

 beyond its early condition ; '~ 

 Tis'sue, refer to Desmogen, Vascu- 

 lar Tissue, etc. ; ~ Wood, derived 

 from the cambium but not in the 

 original bundle as first formed, it 



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