172 THE NATURAL SYSTEM. 



with leaves, and composed of cellular tissue and soalariform duota (Ferns, 

 mosses, club-mosses, horsetails, etc.) 

 Thallogkn^ (Sa/l^of, green branel!, yEvvdu). 



KloweWess plants producing in vegetation a thalliis, -with no distinction 

 of stem and leaf, or root, and composed of cellular tissue only (Lichens, 

 fungi, etc.) 



900. Classes op the flowbeless plants. For the sate of analogy 

 and an advantageous comparison with the Phsenogams, we may also 

 regard these two provinces of the Cryptogams in the light of Classes 

 founded upon their different modes of fruitbearing. Thus the Acro- 

 gens constitute the class 



AkgiospOR^ (ayyeioc, anopa). 



Acrogenous plants, producing their spores in sporangia (vessels) which 

 burst when the spores are mature. 

 Gtmnospoe^ {yv/ivbc, aTTopu). 



Thallogenous plants reproduced by spores, which are produced in parent 

 cells, either forming a part of the vegetating thaUus, or growing upon the 

 surface of some definite region of the thaUus. 



901. Fourth division — cohorts. The six classes, as above constituted, are 

 still each of great extent, — too great for the comprehensiou of the learner, or prac- 

 tical use. A further division is therefore necessary. To effect this on strictly 

 natural principles botanists have labored hitherto in vain. The truth is, the 

 members of these several classes are united by affinities so equable as to render 

 it impossible to subdivide, except by distinctions more or less arbitrary. So 

 adjacent territories, where rivers or other natural boundaries are wanting, must be 

 separated by artificial lines. 



902. The angiospebms are divided by Db Candolle, in his great descriptive 

 worli '■ Prodromus Systematis Naturalis Eegui TegetabUis" into four sub-classes 

 founded upon the conditions of the floral envelops, viz. : 



1. Thalamiflorce, petals distinct, and (with the stamens) hypogynous. 



2. Calyciflorce, petals (with the stamens) perigynous. 



3. CoroUiflorce, petals united, hypogynous, stamens epipetalous. 

 i. MonocMamydece, petals wanting. 



903. The plan op Endlicher in his " Genera Plantarum" is more 

 simple and convenient, and has been followed by American writers 

 generally. Ho separates the Angiospermas into three " cohorts," thus : 



1. Diaiypeialce {dca2,va, to dissolve). Exogenous plants, having both calyx 

 and corolla, the latter composed of distinct petals (polypetalous), sometimes 

 slightly cohering by the base of the stamens, rarely abortive. 



2. Gamopetal(E {yafioq, union). Exogenous plants, having both calyx and 

 corolla, the latter composed of petals more or less united. 



3. ApeUHxB (a, privative). Exogenous plants with flowers having a calyx 

 only, or neither calyx nor corolla (achlamydeous). 



904. The class pbtaliferjE may be conveniently separated into 

 two cohorts, as follows. 



1. SpadiciflorcE. Endogenous plants with flowers having no perianth, or a 

 scaly one, and borne on a thicliened spadii, which is often enveloped in a 



