20G 



SCIENCE OF GARDENING. 



PART II. 



965. Tlie most universal plants are the agamous 

 families. Their germs are the only ones which nature 

 developes spontaneously in all climates. The poly- 

 trychum commune (Jig- 70. ) grows in all latitudes ; in 

 Europe and under the equator ; on high mountains and 

 on a level with the sea ; in short, wherever there is 

 shade and humidity. No phanerogamous plants have 

 organs sufficiently flexible to accommodate themselves in 

 this manner to every zone. The alsine media, fragaria 

 vesca, and solanum nigrum, have been supposed to enjoy 

 this advantage ; but all that can be said is, that these 

 plants are very much spread, like the people of the race 

 of Caucasus, in the northern part of the ancient con- 

 tinent. (Humboldt.) 



SECT. VI. " Economical Distribution of Vegetables. 



966. The plants chiefly employed in human economy differ in different climates and 

 countries i but some, as the cereal grasses, are in universal use ; and others, as the banana 

 and plamain (Jig. 71.), only in the countries which 



produce ttiem. 



967. The bread-corn of the temperate climates is 

 chiefly wheat and maize ; of the hot climates rice, and 

 of the coldest climates barley. 



968. The edible roots of the old world are chiefly the 

 yam, sweet potatoe, onion, carrot, and turnip ; of the 

 new the potatoe. 



969. The oleraceous herbs of temperate climates are 

 chiefly the brassica family, and other cruciferae. In 

 hot climates pot-herbs are little used. Legumes, as 

 the pea, bean, and kidney-bean, are in general use in 

 most parts of the old world. 



970. The fruits of the northern hemisphere belong 

 chiefly to the orders of Pomaceae, Amygdalineae, 

 Grossulareae, Rosaceae, Viticeae, and Amentaceae. 



The fruits of the East Indies belong chiefly to Myrtaceae, Guttifereae, Auranteao, Musaceae, Palmae, Cu 

 curbitaceae, Myristiceae, &c. 



The fruits of China are chiefly of the orders of Auranteae, Myrtaceae, Rhamnea?, Pomaceae, Amygda 

 lineae, Palmae, &c. 



The fruits of Africa belong to Sapoteae, Palmae, Chrysobalaneae, Guttifereae, Apocineae, Papilionaceae, 

 Musaceae, and Cucurbitaceae. 



The fruits of South America belong to Annonaceae, Myrtaceae, Terebintaceae, Myristiceae, Palmae, Bro- 

 meliaceae, Sapoteae, Laurinae, Chrysobalaneae, Musaceae, Papilionaceae, and Passifloreae. 



971. The most showy herbaceous flowers of the temperate zone belong to Rosaceae, Li- 

 liaceae, Irideae, Ericinae, Ranunculaceae, Primulaceae, Caryophylleae, Gentianeae, &c. 

 Those of the torrid zone belong to the Scitamineae, Amaryllideae, Bignoniaceae, Mela- 

 stomaceae, Magnoliaceas, Papilionacea?, Apocineas, &c. 



The most useful timber-trees of temperate climates are of the pine or fir kind ; of warm climates the 

 palm and bamboo. The universal agricultural order is the Graminece. 



SECT. VII. Arithmetical Distribution of Vegetables. 



972. The total number ofsjyecies of plants known, or believed to exist, amounts to about 

 44,000, of which 38,000 have been described. According to Humboldt and R. Brown, 

 they are thus distributed : in Europe 7000 ; in temperate Asia 1500; in equinoctial Asia 

 and the adjacent islands 4500 ; in Africa 3000 ; in temperate America, in both hemi- 

 spheres, 4000 ; in equinoctial America 13,000 ; in New Holland and the islands of the 

 Pacific Ocean 5000 ; in all 38,000. In Spitzbergen there are 30 species of perfect 

 plants ; in Lapland 534 ; in Iceland 533 ; in Sweden 1299; in Scotland 900 ; in Britain 

 1400 ; in Brandenburg 2000 ; in Piedmont 2800 ; in Jamaica, Madagascar, and the coast 

 of Coromandel, from 4000 to 5000. 



SECT. VIII. Distribution of the British Flora, indigenous and exotic. 



973. About thirteen thousand plants compose the Hortus Britannicus, or such species 

 as admit of cultivation. Mosses, Fungi, Fuci, Algae, and Lichens are, with a few ex- 

 ceptions, excluded. 



