EUPSORBIAOE^. 155 



In the present state of our kno-wledge, there is only one character 

 common to all the Euphorliaeece : their descendent ovules, whose 

 mioropyle is turned upwards and outwards. The number is always 

 definite, but there is sometimes one and sometimes two in each cell. 

 This is the character we employed in the first place, and we still 

 think it is the only one practicable; we have divided all the 

 Euphorliaeece iuto uniovulate and biovulate. Other characters, 

 formerly considered to be constant in this family, are now found 

 to be only so ia the majority of cases, but are wanting in certain 

 exceptions. First there was the presence of albumen around the 

 embryo ; but this sometimes disappears or more often is reduced to 

 a membrane in certain species whose thickened cotyledons become 

 plano-convex, without which, after our manner of limiting the genera, 

 we might exclude other species which have all the other common 

 characters, but where the albumen is thickened in consequence of the 

 foliaceous conformation of the cotyledons. The. existence of a 

 placentary projection called by us obturator, is also a nearly constant 

 character, and this organ often attains such a development, that it 

 much exceeds the size of the ovules inserted below it. Evidently 

 we could not, for such differences, place two plants in two distinct 

 genera or even in two distinct families. The Euphorliaeece are all 

 provided with diclinous flowers, according to most authors ; it has 

 been seen that we only consider this character as very frequent, but 

 not as constant. The divisions of the family in Frodromus^ are 

 based on the form of the cotyledons, certain Euphorliaeece having 

 them much larger than the radicle {Flatylolece), whilst others have 

 them thick, semi-cylindrical, or nearly so, and of about the same 

 size as the radicle (Stenololecs) ; on the prsefloration of the calyx, 

 sometimes valvate, sometimes imbricate ; on the presence or absence 

 of petals ; on the mode of insertion of the androceum, sometimes in 

 the centre of the receptacle, sometimes under the base of a central 

 body (usually a rudimentary gyneeceum ^) ; on the form of the 

 stamens, whose anthers have the cells longitudinally adnate to the 

 connective, or free and only attached by an extremity, and whose 

 filament is upright from the bud or incurvate at that period in such 

 a manner as to bear outwardly the front of the anther, which is 



'■ See the table in tWs volume, p. 189. '^ Frequently described as a central disk. 



