THE LIGNEOUS 8T8TEM. 

 598 



13d 



6S7 5SS 5S3 590 



587, Rootlet of Madder, showing cells expanded into fibrillin. 58S, Glandular hair of Fraxl- 

 nella,"section. 5S9, Hair of Bryonia, of several cells. 590, Hair of several cells, surmounted by 

 a gland, of Antirrhinum majus. 591, Sting of Urtica dioica. 592, Jointed hair of the stamens of 

 Tradescantia. 593, Stellate hair from the petiole of Nuphar advena (magnified 200 diameters, 

 Henfrcy). 594, Branched hair, one cell, of Arabis. 



CHAPTER IV. 



THE LIGNEOUS SYSTEM 



685. Includes the firm structures of roots, stems, and their append- 

 ages, summarily called the wood. 



686. Structure. The growing rootlet of the germinating plant exhibits under 

 a microscope a nearly uniform mass of cellular tissue. The cells composing it ara 

 8oft and delicate, with thin, porous walls adapted to absorb moisture, which it haa 

 already begun to do. It grows by the accession of cell to cell through their divi- 

 eion and enlargement at its point, or rather just behind the advance layer which 

 constitutes its cap (pileorhiza § 725. 



687. The earliest tissue. The same structure also appears in the expanding 

 cotyledons and the opening bud of the plumule. At this early stage, therefore, all 

 plants alike in all their parts are composed of simple parenchyma. Subsequent 

 changes in structure occur, giving to each tribe its several peculiarities. Still the 

 growing point3 of the axis, both ascending and descending, advance by the forma- 

 tion of the same tissue, and the vessels, if formed at all, follow a little later. 



688. The changes. The rootlet soon becomes a root, assumes a corky layer in- 

 stead of the tender, spongiform epidermis, and ceases to absorb. But new rootleta 

 spring from the radicle, or branch from the axis, which in their turn absorb, harden, 

 divide and subdivide ; and so on indefinitely. 



689. The increasing demand for moisture is thus met by the multiplica- 

 tion of these root ends, which have been called the spongelets. The absorbing sur- 

 face is also greatly increased by the hair-like processes of the epidermis; — th« 

 fibrillar (§ 724) which multiply generally in proportion to the dryness of the soil 



690. There are pour general modes of growth and structure, 

 wherehy the vegetable kingdom is distinguished into as many great 

 classes, viz.: 



