. Botany for high schools and colleges. Botany. HEL VELLAGE^. zm immediate result of tliis process of fertilization is tlie bud- ding out and upward gro wtli of a large number of hyphse from beneath the carpogonium {B, Fig. 194); these form a dense felted mass, from •which, eventually, there rise vertical, cl o s e -1 y crowded hyphae, which form the hymenium [A, h, Fig. 190). In the ter- minal portions of certain of the vertical hyphse the protoplasm condenses around certain points, and thus gives rise to asco- spores {B, a to /, Fig. 196). In this genus (Pe- ziza), as well as most others of


. Botany for high schools and colleges. Botany. HEL VELLAGE^. zm immediate result of tliis process of fertilization is tlie bud- ding out and upward gro wtli of a large number of hyphse from beneath the carpogonium {B, Fig. 194); these form a dense felted mass, from •which, eventually, there rise vertical, cl o s e -1 y crowded hyphae, which form the hymenium [A, h, Fig. 190). In the ter- minal portions of certain of the vertical hyphse the protoplasm condenses around certain points, and thus gives rise to asco- spores {B, a to /, Fig. 196). In this genus (Pe- ziza), as well as most others of this order, the ascospores are always eight in each ascus. At matur-. 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 Bessey, Charles E. (Charles Edwin), 1845-1915. New York : H. Holt


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectbotany, bookyear1888