. Class-book of botany : being outlines of the structure, physiology and classification of plants : with a flora of the United States and Canada . Botany; Botany; Botany. 68 INFLORESCENCE. the proliferous rose wheri the axis grows on through the flover bearing leaves above it In some instances the skillful gardener learns ho-w to effect this interchange of nature in the buds at pleasure. 324. Hence in position and arrangement flower buds can not differ from leaf buds, and both are settled by'the same unerring law which determines the arrangement of the leaves. Accordingly the flower bud is alw


. Class-book of botany : being outlines of the structure, physiology and classification of plants : with a flora of the United States and Canada . Botany; Botany; Botany. 68 INFLORESCENCE. the proliferous rose wheri the axis grows on through the flover bearing leaves above it In some instances the skillful gardener learns ho-w to effect this interchange of nature in the buds at pleasure. 324. Hence in position and arrangement flower buds can not differ from leaf buds, and both are settled by'the same unerring law which determines the arrangement of the leaves. Accordingly the flower bud is always found either terminal or axillary. 325. A single bud, whether terminal or axillary, may develop eithe? a compound infiorescence, consisting of several flowers with their stalks and bracts, or a solitary infiorescence, consisting of a single flower. 326. The rLOWER-Btro is incapable op extension. While the leaf- bud may unfold leaf after leaf and node after node to an indefinite ex- tent, the flower-bud blooms, dies, and arrests for ever the extension of the axil which bore it, 327. The peduncle is the flower-stalk. It bears no leaves, or at least only such as are reduced in size and changed in form, called bracts. If the peduncle is wanting the flower is said to be sessile. 328. The simple peduncle bears a single flower ; but if the pedun- â cle be divided into branches, it bears several flowers, and the final divis- ions bearing each a single flower, are called pedicels. 329. The scape is a flower-stalk which springs from a subterranean stem, in such plants as are called stemless or aculescent, as the prim- rose, tulip, blood-root. Like the peduncle it is leafless or with bracts only, and may be either simple or branched. V 330. The eachis (paxi?, spine) is the axis of the inflorescence, or the main stem of the compound peduncle along which the pedicels are arranged. 331. The torus^r receptacle is the end or summit of the flower- stalk. 18T 186 186. Aoomalous peduncleB. 1


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