XVI INTRODUCTION. 



usually called leaves or segments) is one in which the sepals and petals are similar in form 

 and textvu-e, and present apparently a single whorl. Bvit if examined in the young bud, 

 one half of the parts will generally be foimd to be placed outside the other half, and 



here will frequently be some sliglit difference in texture, size, and coloiu*, indicating to 

 the close observer the ]Dresence of both calyx and corolla. Hence much discrepancy in 

 descriptive works. Where one botanist describes a simple perianth of six segments, 

 another will speak of a double perianth of three sepals and three petals. 



•99. The following terms and prefixes, expressive of the modifications of form and 

 arrangement of the corolla and its petals, are equally applicable to the calyx and its 

 sepals, and to the simple perianth and its segments. 



100. The Corolla is said to be monopetahus when the petals are united, either en- 

 tirely or at the base only, into a cup, tube, or ring ; 'polypetalous when they are all 

 free from the base. These expressions, established by a long usage, are not strictly 

 correct, for monopetalous (consisting of a single petal) should apply rather to a corolla 

 really reduced to a single petal, which would then be on one side of the axis ; and 

 polypetalous is sometimes used more appropriately for a corolla with an indefinite 

 number of petals. Some modern botanists liave therefore proposed the term gamo- 

 petalous for the corolla with united petals, and dicdypetalous for that with free petals ; 

 but the old established expressions are still the most generally vised. 



101. When the petals are partially united, the lower entire poi'tion of the corolla is 

 called the tube, whatever be its shape, and tlie free portions of the petals are called the 

 teeth, lobes, or segments (39), according as they are short or long in proportion to the 

 whole length of the corolla. When the tube is excessively short, the petals appear at 

 first sight free, but their slight union at the base must be carefully attended to, being 

 of importance in classification. 



102. The .HSstivation of a corolla, is the arrangement of the petals, or of such portion 

 of them as is free, in the unexpanded bud. It is 



valvate, when they are strictly whorled in their whole length, their edges being 

 placed against each other without overlapping. If the edges are much mflexed, the 

 sestivation is at the same time induplicate ; involute, if the margins are rolled inward ; 

 reduplicate, if the margins project outwards into salient angles ; revolute, if the margins 

 are rolled outwards ; plicate, if the petals are folded in longitudinal plaits. 



imbricate, when the whorl is more or less broken by some of the petals being out- 

 side tlie others, or by their overlapping each other at least at the top. Five-petaled 

 imbricate corollas are quincuncially imbricate when one petal is outside, and an adjoin- 

 ing one wholly inside, the three others intermediate and overlapping on one side ; 

 hilahiate, when two adjoining ones are inside or outside the three others. Imbricate 

 petals are described as crumpled {corrugate) when puckered irregularly in the bud. 



twisted, contorted, or convolute, when each petal overlaps an adjoining one on one 

 side, and is overlapped by the other adjoining one on the other side. Some botanists 

 include the twisted sestivation in the general term imbricate ; others carefully distin- 

 guish the one from the other. 



103. In a few cases the overlapping is so slight that tlie three sestivations cannot 

 easily be distinguished one from the other ; in a few others the sestivation is variable, 

 even in the same species, but, in general, it supplies a constant character in species, in 

 genera, or even in Natural Orders. 



104. In general shape the Corolla is 



tubular, when the whole or the greater part of it is in the form of a tube or 

 cylinder. 



campannlaie, when approacliing in some measure the shape of a cup or bell. 



urceolate, when the tube is swollen or nearly globular, contracted at the top, and 

 slightly expanded again in a narrow rim. 



rotate or stellate, when the petals or lobes are spread out horizontally from the 

 base, or nearly so, like a wheel or star. 



hypocrateriform or salver-shaped, when the lower part is cylindrical and the 

 upper portion expanded horizontally. In tliis case the name of tube^is, restricted to the 

 cylindi-ical part, and the horizontal portion is called the limh, wliether it be divided to 

 the base or not. The orifice of the tube is called its mouth or throat. 



