ericaceous 
(ADDITIONS) 
Pruit-bodies 
tum, Warming’s term for a plant- 
association of Lguisetum. 
erica’ceous, heath-like, or allied to 
the genus Hrica. 
erice’tinous, ‘‘ growing on heaths” 
(Heinig). 
eri’nous(er, evis,ahedgehog), ‘prickly, 
rough with sharp points ” (Heinig). 
Escape’, a cultivated plant found 
rowing as though wild, dispersed 
Yy some agency. 
ethnobotan'ic (€4vos, a tribe, Bordyy, 
a herb), relating to those plants 
which illustrate or are typical of 
the customs of a given race or 
people. 
e'tiolative, tending to disease ; etio- 
log’ical, connected with AETIOLOGY. 
eupot’amic (rorayos, a river), applied 
to the plankton of running or 
standing inland waters (Zimmer). 
Euthal'lophytes, Engler’s term for 
THALLOPHYTES exclusive of Myxo- 
gastres. 
Excoria’tion (ex, out of, corium, skin), 
the falling off of the outer layer of 
the terminal cells of glandular or 
capitate hairs, as in Geranium 
(Heinig) ; Excortica’tion (corticatus, 
covered with bark), the stripping 
of bark, 
Ex‘it, the inner aperture of the slit 
of a stoma; in Germ. ‘“‘ Ausgang.” 
Ex’ocarp, Hxocar’pium (#w, outside, 
xapros, fruit), the outer layer of a 
pericarp ; Exomeristem (+ Menrt- 
sTEM), Russow’s term for the 
meristem which produces all the 
tissues of a Moss outside the 
central-strand, namely cortex and 
epidermis (Vaizey) ; Exopleu’ra 
(wrevpd, the side) = TxEst« (Heinig) ; 
Exot‘ism, w shortened form of 
Exot’icism, the condition of non- 
nativity, introduced from abroad. 
Explodifio’rae (explodo, I drive off, 
flos, floris, a flower), Delpino’s 
term for wind-fertilized flowers 
which expel their pollen by an 
explosive action. 
exraphid'ian (ex = 
RaPuis), 
(Gulliver). 
without, + 
destitute of raphides 
308 
ex’tra-xylem’ic (+ XyLem), outside 
the xylem (Roulet). 
Exu’sion, Berkeley’s term for Exv- 
DATION. 
fa'cial, applied to a hilum which is 
on the side and not on the margin 
of a seed (Heinig). 
Fan, an equivalent of Rurriprum. 
Fasergriibchen (Germ.) = Cryprto- 
STOMATA. 
Fi’brotype (jibra, a filament, typus, a 
type), Macdougal’s expression for 
the condition of a root of Cephalan- 
thera with a reduction and fusion 
of the stelar compounds, and radi- 
ally elongated cortex. 
Fil'ial-cell, Henfrey’s 
Daughter-cell. 
filicin’ean, relating to the Filicineae, 
that is, Ferns in the widest sense 
(Scott). 
fimic’olous (jimus, dung, colo, I in- 
habit), growing on manure-heaps. 
Fi‘niform (jinis, a boundary, + 
Form), a form whose nearest re- 
lations have completely died out 
(Kuntze). 
Fissipar’ity = FIssIPpARISM. 
Flo’ral-leaf, suggested equivalent for 
the Germ. ‘‘ Hochblatt ” ; a bract. 
fluorescigen'ic (+ FLUORESCENCE, 
yévos, offspring), causing fluores- 
cence, as certain bacteria. 
Fo'liole, Fod’iola, add, (2) employed by 
Spruce for the postical leaves of 
Hepaticae, those on the ventral or 
rooting surface ; fo’liose, applied 
to a Lichen with a leaf-like ex- 
pansion of the thallus. 
Fore-leaf, a translation of the Germ. 
‘*Vorblatt” ; a bracteole or pro- 
phyllum. 
Form, nearly thirty special terms 
are enumerated by O. Kuntze in 
his ‘‘ Methodik der Speciesbe- 
schreibung,” pp. 15-17. 
Founda'tion, a literal rendering of the 
Germ. ‘‘ Anlage.” 
Front-cav‘ity, the outer cavity of a 
stoma ; in Germ. ‘‘ Vorhof.” 
Fruit-bear’er, Potter’s 
CARPOPHORE; ~ 
term for 
term for 
-bod’ies, (1) 
