94 BOTANY. 



Oaryophyllus), etc. ; (4) coatings of minute needles or grains 

 irregularly covering the surface with several layers — e.g., on 

 the leaves of Eucalyptus globulus, rye, etc. 



126. — The protoplasm of the epidermal cells generally 

 disappears in those cases where there is much thickening of 

 the walls ; it is always present in young plants and parts of 

 plants ; it is also frequently present in older portions, which 

 are not so much exposed to the drying action of the atmos- 

 phere, as in roots, and the leaves and shoots of aquatic plants, 

 and of those growing in humid places. In few cases, how- 

 ever, are granular protoplasmic bodies {e.g., chlorophyll) pres- 

 ent in epidermal cells. * 



127. — While the epidermis always consists at first of but 

 one layer of cells, it may become split into two or more lay- 

 ers by subsequent divisions parallel to its siirface. These 

 layers may resemble the outer one and have their walls 

 thickened, as in the leaves of the Oleander, or they may con- 

 sist of thin-walled cells with watery contents (constituting 

 the so-called Aqueous Tissue), as in the leaves of Ficus and 

 Begonia. 



(as) Epidermis may be studied with comparatively little difficulty. 

 In many cases it may be stripped off in thin sheets and mounted in 

 the usual way ; such preparations, with thin cross-sections (which are 

 readily made by placing a piece of leaf between pieces of elder pith), 

 are sufficient, in most cases, to give a good Imowledge of the structure. 

 The leaves of many Lilia-cecB (hyacintlis, lilies, etc.) and Qraminece may 

 be examined for regular cells, and those of many Dicotyledons, as bal- 

 sams, primroses, and fuchsias, for irregular ones. 



(J) Thickened epidermal walls may be found in leaves of a hard tex- 

 ture, as those of the pines, holly, oleander, mistletoe, many Oonpoaitm, 

 and in the stems of many Cactacem. The stratification of the thickened 

 walls may be brought out in the cross-sections by heating in a solution 

 of potash. 



(c) A series of specimens of the epidermis, taken from leaves of all 

 ages, from their younjiest and smallest rudiments in the bud up to full- 

 grown ones, is instructive. 



* In tile leaves of Primula sinensis, grown in the green-house, the 

 epidermal cells contain many chlorophyll-bodies ; the leaves of Fuchsias, 

 under similar conditions, possess a tew chlorophyll-bodies in the epider- 

 mal layer. 



