APPENDIX A. 



SUBSTITUTION OF AXIAL FOR FOLIAR ORGANS IN PLANTS. 



I APPEND here the evidences referred to in 190. The most 

 numerous and striking I have met with among the Umbelliferce. 

 Monstrosities having the alleged implication, are frequent in the 

 common Cow-Parsnep so frequent that they must be familiar to 

 botanists; and wild Angelica supplies many over-developments of 

 like meaning. Omitting numerous cases of more or less significance, 

 1 will limit myself to two. 



One of them is that of a terminal umbel, in which nine of the outer 

 umbellules are variously transformed here a single flower being made 

 monstrous by the development of some of its members into buds ; 

 there several such malformed flowers being associated with rays that 

 bear imperfect umbellules ; and elsewhere, flowers being replaced by 



imbellules : some of which nre perfect, and others imperfect only in 

 the shortness of the flower-stalks. The annexed Fig. 69, represent 

 ing in a somewhat conventionalized way, a part of the dried sped- 

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