11 



I 



PLATE VI. 



THE FLOWERING PLANT. 



DIAGRAM I. Showing 



I Node*, bearing leaves (L. nodus, a knot). 



I Internodes, bearing no leaves (L. inter, between ; nodus, a knot). 

 ( Leaf. 



APPENDAGES OF STEM &amp;lt; Bud, a shortened stem with crowded leaves. 

 Branch, an expanded bud. 



f Axillary, in the angle between the leaf and stein (L. axilla, the armpit). 

 POSITION OF BUDS . &amp;lt; 



( Terminal. 



Fio. 1 (a). THE HORSE CHESTNUT. Showing 



Interuodes. 



Nodes with leaf-scars. 



Two axillary buds. 



Terminal bud. 

 Fa;. 1 (6). THE SAME. Showing the scars left by the falling off of the bud-scales. These scars mark the 



commencement of a year s growth. 

 Fio. 2. BULB OF ONION. Showing 



Stem, short. 



Leaves, crowded, and stored with nutriment. 



Buds (1) terminal and (2) axillary. 



Roots, fibrous. 



The peculiarity of the Onion is this : it remains permanently in the bud condition. A 



permanent bud of that kind is called a bulb. 

 Fio. 3. Showing KINDS OF LEAVES 



Scale leaves. 



Foliage leaves the green leaves which manufacture starch (L. folium, the leaf). 



Bracts leaves near flowers (L. bractea, a thin plate). 



Floral leaves (L. flos, a flower). (Red.) 

 FIGS. 4, 5. EXAMPLES OF LEAVES 



Pinnate leaf, with elongated midrib (Pea). 



Palmate leaf, with extremely short midrib (Horse Chestnut). 



Compound leaf. The incisions extending into the midrib, and subdividing one leaf into a number 

 of leaflets. 



Stipules appendages originating from the base of leaf-stalk, not from the stem. 

 FIG. 6. Showing FOLIAGE LEAVES united or connate (L. con, together ; nut us, born). 

 FIG. 7. FLOWER OF PEA. Showing 



Sepal leaves united below (gamosepalous calyx). 



Petal leaves of unequal size (irregular corolla indicated in formula by v). 

 FIG. 8. Showing GENERAL STRUCTURE OF THE FLOWER 



Calyx (Gr. kalyx, a cup). 



Corolla (L. corolla, a little crown). 



Stamens or Androecium \ _,., 



Filament (L. fit urn, a thread). 

 (Gr. aner, male ; oikos, &amp;gt; , , . n 



. Anther containing pollen-grams, 

 house) (male organs) / 



Pistil or Gyncecium (Gr. \ Ovary containing ovules. 



gune, female; oikos, V Style. 



house (female organs) ) Stigma (Gr. stigma, a brand). 

 FIG. 9. PLAN OP PEA FLOWER. Showing 

 Calyx .five sepal leaves united. 

 Corolla = five petal leaves separate. 



Androecium = ten stamen leaves, nine united and one free. 

 Gynoecium = one carpel leaf. 



Formula V Ca. (5), Co. 5, An. (9) + 1 Gn. 1. 



