THE ROOT, OR DESCENDING AXIS. 



25 



insures a firm hold upon the earth, and brings a large absorbing sur- 

 face in contact with the moist soil. 



US. White elever— an axial root (with minute tubers). 24, Buttercups— fibrous roots, 

 inaxial. 25, ErigeEia— root tuberous. 



118- The summit of the root, or that place where the root meets 

 the stem, is called the -collum ; the remote, opposite extremities, the 

 ■ends of the fibers, being chiefly active in absorption, are the spongioles. 

 Neither of these terms <lenote distinct -organs, but places only, and are 

 often convenient. 



119. Fibrill.e, a Latin term, refers to those minute hairs, (seen only 

 with a lens), which clothe the younger fibers. They arise from the 

 tender epidermis or skin, and perish when that thickens into bark 

 These cooperate with the fibers in the absorption of fluids. These two 

 organs are the only efficient absorbers of liquid nourishment. 



120. Transplanting trees. The fibrillse are developed and "perish annually 

 -with the leaves, whose servants they are. Few of them remain after the fall of the 

 deaf. This fact plainly indicates that the proper time for transplanting trees or shrubs 

 is the late autumn, winter, or early spring, when there are but few tender fibrillae to 

 be injured. 



121. Two modes of root-development are definitely distinguished, 

 — the axial and the inaxial. 



122. The axial mode is that where the primary, simple radicle, in 

 growing extends itself downwards in a main body more or less branched, 

 •continuous with the stem, and forms the permanent .root of the plant. 



