IQ2 



MOSSES WITH A HAND-LENS 



close 



Gemmae, bud-like bodies, cap- 

 able of reproducing the plant. 

 Sometimes borne in special heads, 

 sometimes on the surface of the 

 leaves. (Fig. i6.) 



Gciniuifcroiis or gemmiparous, 

 bearing gemmae. 



Gibbous (capsule), more 

 tumid or swollen on one side than 

 on the other. (Fig. 17.) 



Glaucous, originally applied 

 to plants covered with a bluish 

 white bloom, but also applied to 

 mosses that have that color. 



Gregarious, growing near to- 

 gether or clustered, but not in 

 tufts or mats. 

 Gymnoslomous, without a peristome. 

 Habitat, the place in which a plant 

 grows ; often used in a general way to 

 designate the kind of place usually oc- 

 cupied by a plant. 

 Hamate or hamulose, curved like a hook; more 

 sharply and abruptly curved than in falcate and 

 circinate. 



Hctcromallous (leaves or branches), turned in different 

 directions. 



Homomallous, turned in the same direction. 

 Hygroscopic, readily absorbing water and there- 

 by altered in form or direction. Hygrometric is 

 sometimes used with a similar meaning. 



Hypophysis, a swelling of the seta immediately 

 -under the capsule. (Fig. 10.) 



Imbricated, closely overlapping each other like 

 the tiles of a roof. (Fig. 18.) 



Immersed, covered up; of the capsule when the 

 perichaetial leaves project beyond it. 



Incubous. of the leaves of Hepatics, having 

 the upper margin overlapping the lower margin 

 of the leaf next above. (See Porella and Radula.) 



