. A manual of botany. Botany. Fig. 916. Longitudinal section of cone of Lycopodium^ showing the spoi-angia in tlie axils of the sporophylla. Fig. 917. Lycopodium annotinum. p. Prothallium. h The young plant, w. Its root. After Funkhauser. (fig. 916). They arise from several cells instead of from a single one as in the ferns. They show no special peculiarity in their development. The spores are all microspores. In Psilotum and Tmesipteris the sporangia are bilocular or trilocular, being synangia, as in the Marattias. They are stalked bodies, borne upon the upper surface of the bilobed sporo- ph
. A manual of botany. Botany. Fig. 916. Longitudinal section of cone of Lycopodium^ showing the spoi-angia in tlie axils of the sporophylla. Fig. 917. Lycopodium annotinum. p. Prothallium. h The young plant, w. Its root. After Funkhauser. (fig. 916). They arise from several cells instead of from a single one as in the ferns. They show no special peculiarity in their development. The spores are all microspores. In Psilotum and Tmesipteris the sporangia are bilocular or trilocular, being synangia, as in the Marattias. They are stalked bodies, borne upon the upper surface of the bilobed sporo- phyll at the junction of its two Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Green, J. Reynolds (Joseph Reynolds), 1848-1914. London, J. & A. Churchill
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectbotany, bookyear1895