aereus 
(ADDITIONS) 
anchoraeform 
more or less spherical, and freely 
driven about in the sea. 
ae’reus (Lat.), copper-coloured, or 
bronzed. 
A’érobe, a suggested abbreviation of 
AEROBIUM ; aéroph'ilous (pidéw, I 
love), Beijerinck’s term for essen- 
tially aérobiotic organisms; ¢/. 
MICROAEROPHILOUS. 
Aestiva’ria, the summer quarters of 
plants in botanic gardens. 
afo’liate (a, without, foliwm, a leaf), 
leafless ; a hybrid word for APHYL- 
Lous. 
Agamob‘ium (Bios, life), H. Gibson’s 
term for the asexual generation 
in organisms showing alternation 
of generations; the sporophyte ; 
Agamonoe’cia (+ Mownorcta), used 
by Engler and Prantl for those 
plants which have hermaphrodite 
and barren flowers in the same in- 
florescence, as Viburnum Opulus, 
Linn. 
Agrostol’ogist, an expert or writer on 
grasses. 
agricult’/ural species, so-called, are 
constant forms or varieties of cul- 
tivated plants, as maize, wheat, 
ete. 
Albica’tion, becoming blanched or 
variegated with white. 
al’goid (eldos, resemblance), like an 
Alga; Al’go-li’chenes, Lindsay’s 
term for certain transitional forms 
between Algae and Lichens. 
AViquote (aliquot, some in numbers), 
the constant of temperatures for a 
given event in the life-cycle of an 
organism; the sum - temperature 
of the event divided by the total 
sum -temperature of the year 
(Linsser), 
alternipet/alous (réradov, a flower 
leaf), applied to stamens alternat- 
ing with the petals; alterni- 
sep’alous (+ SEPaLum), used of 
petals alternating with the sepals. 
Am’ber, the English name of Suc- 
CINITE. 
Ambro’sia, the mycelial or oidial 
stage of a Fungus, probably of 
some Ascomycete, found in the bur- 
296 
rows of some beetles in fruit-trees, 
and believed to be used as food, 
Amentifio’rae (los, floris, a flower), 
wind - fertilized, catkin - bearing 
plants, as the hazel or willow 
(Delpino). 
am/inoid (efdos, resemblance), used by 
Kerner for those scents which 
have an amine as their foundation, 
and diffuse into the air, such as 
the hawthorn and elder. 
Am'pelid (duzedos, a vine), used by 
J. Smith for any climbing plant ; 
Ampelog’raphist (ypd¢w, I write), 
a writer on vines. 
amphicoe’lous (kotAos, hollow}, con- 
cave on beth sides (Heinig). 
amphicri’bral (cribrum, a sieve), ap- 
plied to a hadrocentric bundle 
(Haberlandt) ; Amphigen’esis (yéve- 
ots, beginning) ; Amphig’ ony (-yévos, 
offspring), sexual reproduction 
(Haeckel); Amphigon’ium, Kerner’s 
term for ARCHEGONIUM ; amphisto- 
matic (+ Stoma), with stomata on 
both upper and lower leaf-surfaces ; 
amphitroph’ic, relating to AMPHI- 
TROPHY; amphiva’sal (vasa, vessels), 
used of a leptocentric bundle 
(Haberlandt). 
anaereticus (av, without, alperckds, 
power of choosing), applied by C. 
Schimper to an abnormal arrange- 
ment of the leaves in single rows 
on the axis, as happens in torsion, 
ete. 
androdynam’ic, = ANDRODYNAMOUS. 
Anast’ates, pl. (dvdc7aros, removed), 
the products of anabolic or 
ascending conversion of food- 
material into protoplasm (Parker). 
Anataximorph’osis (av, without, rdéus, 
order, nop¢}, change), Gubler’sterm 
for teratologic changes which are in 
conformity with the normal order ; 
anatyp‘ic (rvqos, a type), applied to 
an anomaly which conforms to the 
general law of the organism ; Ana- 
ty’pose, an anomaly of the kind 
specified (Gubler). 
anchor’aeform (anchora, an anchor, 
Jorma, shape), with two limbs, as in 
the petals of Ankyropetalum, Fenzl. 
