PART II 

 DEVELOPMENT OF PLANTS 



CHAPTER V 



CLASSIFICATION OF PLANTS 



59. The Method of Classifying Plants. — We have now arrived 

 at an understanding of the nature of the plant and the work 

 which it performs. In this study the most complex forms have 

 been largely considered. There are, however, a great variety of 

 very simple forms ranging from single-celled plants that often 

 form the green coatings on tre^s up to the complex types. How 

 have these different forms come about and what relation do they 

 sustain to one another? We will also be interested to compare 

 the life histories of these different forms and their modes of life. 

 In approaching this subject it is first necessary to gain a know- 

 ledge of the system employed in grouping or classifying plants. 

 Obviously many plants are closely related as the red, white, 

 scarlet oaks. Such a group of closely related plants is called a 

 genus (plural, genera) and the different kinds of individuals 

 which compose the group are known as species. The red oak is 

 one of the species of the oak genus. In scientific work the Latin 

 or Greek names are used to designate the genera and species. 

 In the case of the oak the genus is known as Quercus, an old 

 Latin name for oak, and the red oak species as rubra, meaning 

 red. Both the name of the species and the genus are employed 

 in naming a plant and consequently the scientific name of the 

 red oak is Quercus rubra. You will frequently see a letter or one 

 or more abbreviations after the scientific name, indicating the 

 person or persons who are responsible for giving the name now 

 in use. Thus Quercus rubra L. indicates that this name was 



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