BOTANICAL INTRODUCTION 49 



to which they lielong. It must not be supposed tliat a plant 

 cannot belong to a family, because in one or more points it 

 does not completely agree with the characters of the family. 

 On the other hand, it is also unsafe to suppose that 

 because a plant has certain characters of a family or genus it 

 must necessarily belong to that family or genus. The student 

 cannot be too strongly warned against jumpmg at conclusions 

 of this sort. It is better, moreover, in identifying a specimen 

 to proceed by the method of "exhaustion" than by that of 

 identification, that is to say, it is safer to exclude first all 

 those families and genera to which the plant cannot belong, 

 before determining that to which it does belong. An example 

 will illustrate clearly the various classificatory divisions. 

 The native fiax belongs to the — 

 Species : tenax. 



Genus : Plwrniiuin. 



Family : LiUaccac. 



Ohdek : Liliifforae. 



Sub-C'lass : MonocotijledonR. 

 Glass : AngiospeniiK. 



Key to Classication.'' 



Sub-Kingdom : Phanerogams or Ploweiiug Plants. 



1. Ovules not enclosed in an Ovary— Class 1. CiYlIN0SPBH5L\E, p. 46. 



2. Ovules enclosed in an Ovary— Class 2. AXGIOSPERM.-VE, p. 46. 



(i) Seed with one seed-leaf, leaves generally 



parallel-veined. ^lONOCOTYLEDONS, p. 47 



(ii) Seed with two seed-leaves, lea\'cs 



generally netted-veined. DICOTYLEDONS, p. 47. 



ARTIFICIAL KEY TO THE ANGIOSPERMAE. 

 SUB-CL.YSS I. : Monocotyledons . 



1. Perianth absent. 2. 

 Perianth present. 3. 



2. Climbing, shrubby plant. Leaves long, prickly. Frcneinetia, p. 80. 

 Erect water or marsh plants. \T\ipha. 



*N.B.— It is to be remembered that in many cases this key is true only for New 

 Zealand forms. 



t Not further described. 



