SCALE-LEAVES, FOLIAGE-LEAVES, FLORAL-LEAVES. 639 



the winter, with underground buds or bulbs, the young sprouting foliage-leaves do 

 not have this assistance; they must carve their way through the soil unaided, and 

 press above the surface without a sheathing envelope. Accordingly they have to 

 bore through a more or less thick layer of earth, often a stiff clay; or one perhaps 

 containing pointed stones and angular grains of sand. Now in order that the 

 foliage-leaves traversing this rugged and uneven path may suffer no damage, they 

 are variously folded and twisted together so as to form a cone; and most important 

 of all, the apex of this cone, which operates like a gi-ound-auger, and therefore 

 exercises a strong j)i'essure on the soil, is armed with special cells. These cells 

 have a great resemblance to those at the apex of the sheath-like scale-leaves, and to 

 those of the knee-shaped bent cotyledon of the onion (see p. 606). In many plants 

 possessing lolied or deeply-divided leaf-blades, the boring apex of this cone is formed 

 by a bend of the leaf -stalk, which is doubled over like a hook. Thus in the foliage- 

 leaves of the Yellow Monkshood {Aconitum Vulparia, Lycoctonum, &c.) it is not 

 the apex of the leaf which emerges first from the ground but the convex part of 

 its bent and knee-like stalk. As long as the leaf is still occupied in boring, the 

 delicate fi-ee apices of its lobes are directed inwards and downwards, and not until 

 the hooked leaf -stalk has emerged above the surface of the soil does it straighten 

 and draw the leaf-blade out of the ground. The free i^oints of the leaf-blade, which 

 were hitherto directed downwards, ai-e inclined in the opposite direction when 

 they arrive above the earth, and the whole leaf then unfolds into an expansion 

 parallel to the surface of the ground. An exactly similar process is observed in 

 large ferns with underground winter buds, e.(;. in the common Male-fern (A.y)idiuvi 

 Filix-mas). The fronds at the end of the root-stock are spirally rolled, their 

 delicate segments are packed closely together, one above the other, and covered by 

 the strong rachis of the leaf as by a thick hoop. Only the back of this rachis 

 comes into contact with the forest soil as it is broken through; the rachis prises up 

 the top layer of the soil in its gradual unrolling, and the delicate segments are only 

 unfolded when the part of the axis in question has emerged and straightened itself. 

 The earth is broken through in a very peculiar manner by the peltate leaf- 

 blades of Podophyllum iJcUatum. As long as the leaves of this plant are still 

 small and below the gTOund, they resemble a closed umbrella; the folded blade is 

 directed downwards, and nestles close to the thick stalk, which grows straight up. 

 At the free end of the stalk, which would correspond in position to the ferule of an 

 umbrella held upright, is found a group of thin-walled, turgid cells, without chloro- 

 phyll, situated like a white knob at the converging-point of the leaf-strands. When 

 the leaf -stalk grows in height, it is this cell-group which presses on the layers of earth 

 above it, and it is the first to appear at the surface. The leaf-blade, still furled to 

 the stalk, is then raised up through the hole thus bored. Once above the surface, the 

 blade expands just like an opening umbrella. The above-mentioned group of cells, 

 having served as a buffer, now loses its turgescence, but remains visible as a white 

 spot at the centre of the brownish-green expanded leaf -blade. In the species of the 

 genera Acanthus and Hydrophyllum, which are characterized by divided leaves, 



