INTRODUCTION TO BOTANY. 14} T 
Tailed, caudata . Furnished with appendages like a tail. 
Stsehelina. 
Opercular, opercularia , operculiformis. Shutting up, like 
a lid, the cavity in which the pollen is contained. Serapias, 
Neottia, Limodorum. 
4. Proportion. 
Shorter than the filament, Anther a jilamenlo brevior 
Lilium, Fuchsia. 
As long as the filament, Jilamcnti longitudine. Herman- 
nia denuclata. 
Longer than the filament, filamento longior. Cerinthe 
major. 
IT Unlike, Antherce dissimiles. Different in the same 
flower. Cassia. 
5. Surfaces. 
Smooth, Anthera Icevis . The greatest part of flowers. 
Bald, glabra. Orobanche major. 
Downy, pubescens . Digitalis ferruginea. 
Shaggy, hispida , hirta. Lathraea simplex. 
Fringed, ciliata. Orobanche minor, Brunella, Lavan- 
dula, Galeopsis segetum. 
Bearded, barbata. Having a tuft of hairs in some pecu- 
liar part. Pedicularis, Acanthium, Carpinus. 
Glanduliferous, glandulifera . Having glands. Cardiaca 
vulgaris, Marrubium Hispanicum, Molucella levis. 
6. Lobes . 
One-lobed, Anthera uniloba. Pinus, Larix, Cupressus, 
Juniperus, Thuya. — In pinus, larix, abies, the anthers ap- 
pear to be two-lobed, because, as they are fixed two together 
upon scales that appear like filaments, they resemble the 
two lobes of a single anther ; but their analogy to other 
plants show that they are two single distinct anthers. 
Two-lobed, biloba . The generality of plants. PI. 11, 
fig. 15, 19 and 20. 
Many-lobed, multiloba . Taxus. 
7. Cells. 
One- celled, Anthera unilocularis. Cycas, Larix, Cu- 
pressus, Juniperus, Thuya. 
Two-celled, bilocularis. Orchis, Ephedra. 
Four-celled, quadrilocularis. Most plants. 
Many-celled, multilocularis . Taxus. 
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