328 



BOTANY OF THE LIVING PLANT 



or obliquely, as in the common Male Fern (Nephrodium) (Fig. 267) ; 

 or horizontally with a creeping habit, as in the Bracken [Pteridium), 

 or the Common Polypody. When upright the internodes are short, 

 and the numerous leaves take the basket-like grouping, as in the 



Fig. 267. 

 NcpliroUiuni FiHx-mas, Rich. ^, stock in longitudinal sectioa. y — tteapex. si — 

 thestem. fi^tlieleaf-stallis. 6' = one oi the still folded lea\-cs. g — vascular strands. 

 ii = a leaf -stalk, bearing at A a bud with root at w, and several leaves. C is a similar 

 leaf-stalk cut longitudinally. D = astock, from which the leaves ha\"e been cut away 

 to their bases, lea\ang only those of the terminal bud. The spaces between the leaves 

 are filled with numerous roots, w, w'. E, stock from which the rind has been removed 

 to show the vascular network, g. f = a mesh of the network enlarged, showing the 

 strands which pass out into the leaves. {After Sachs.) 



Male Fern ; when creeping the internodes are longer, so that the leaves 

 are isolated, as on the underground rhizome of the Bracken, the leaves 

 being here the only part above ground. The stems of Ferns have 

 unlimited apical growth, and sometimes fork at their ends, as the 

 Lycopods do. But buds may also appear at the leaf-bases, a condition 



