CHAPTER VI 



SEEDS AND GERMINATION 



THE seed contains a miniature plant, or embryo. The 

 embryo usually has three parts that have received 

 names : the stemlet, or caulicle ; the seed-leaf, or cotyledon 

 (usually i or 2); the bud, or plumule, lying between or 

 above the cotyledons. These parts are well 

 seen in the common bean (Fig. 15), particu- 

 larly when the seed has been soaked for a 



few hours. One of the large cotyledons 

 FIG. 15. PARTS ir ,. L . , , 



OF THE BEAN, comprising half of the bean is shown at 



R, cotyledon-, o, R. The caulicle is at O. The plumule is 

 caulicle; ,4, piu- gh()wn at ^ The coty]edons are attached 



mule; /*, nrst J 



n <fc- to the caulicle at F: this point may be taken 



as the first node or joint. 



The Number of Seed-leaves. All plants having two 

 seed-leaves belong to the group called dicotyledons. Such 

 seeds in many cases split readily in halves, e.g. a bean. 

 Some plants have only one seed-leaf in a seed. They 

 form a group of plants called monocotyledons. Indian 

 corn is an example of a plant with only one seed-leaf : 

 a grain of corn does not split into halves as a bean does. 

 Seeds of the pine family contain more than two cotyledons, 

 but for our purposes they may be associated with the dicoty- 

 ledons, although really forming a different group. 



These two groups the dicotyledons and the mono- 

 cotyledons represent two great natural divisions of the 

 vegetable kingdom. The dicotyledons contain the woody 



