204 



MORPHOLOGY OP ANGIOSPBRMS 



gaea; Onobrychis petraea, in which the proembryo is a globular 

 mass of cells; and Phaseolus multiflorus and Erythrina crista- 



galli, in which the massive pro- 

 embryo is elongated and there 

 is no superficial separation be- 

 tween embryo and suspensor. 



In case two or more of the 

 first divisions are transverse, 

 forming a filamentous proem- 

 bryo, the end-cell forms the en- 

 tire embryo, the suspensor-cells 

 becoming relatively extremely 

 large and bladdery inflated. 

 Two general types may he noted. 

 In Orobus angustifolius, 0. au- 

 reus, Pisum sativum, Lathyrus 

 lieteropliyllus, L. odoratus, Er- 

 vum E it ilia, and Yicia narbon- 

 nensis, a proembryo consisting 

 of a row of three cells divides 

 longitudinally; the two basal 

 cells become much elongated, 

 bladdery inflated, and multinu- 

 cleate; the middle pair become 

 bladdery inflated and multinu- 

 cleate; and at the end of such a 

 suspensor the terminal pair of 

 cells organize a small round, 

 oval, <>r elongated embryo. In Cicer arietinum it is interesting 

 to note that the same huge suspensor and small embryo appear, 

 lint the suspensor-cells instead of becoming multinucleate 

 divide, forming a many-celled massive suspensor. In the other 

 type, transverse divisions continue until the proembryo consists 

 of a long filament of cells, all of which, excepting the end-cell, 

 form a suspensor, as in Medicago falcata ; Oaleqa orientdlis, in 

 which the long suspensor finally becomes massive bv longitu- 

 dinal divisions; and Ononis j rut wosa . in which the suspensor- 

 cells become very large and rounded, forming a chain that 

 finally freaks up. In Ononis alopecuroidcs, however, the sus- 

 pensor is reduced to a single cell. The genus Lupinus is espe- 



Fio. 07. — Embryos of Leguminosae. A, 

 Orobus angustifolius, with suspense^ 

 of three multinucleate cells; x 336. 

 B, On.it' arietinum, with large multi- 

 cellular suspensor and small embryo 

 (c); x 160, — After GeiGNAiin. 21 



