Organography of plants, especially of the archegoniatae and spermaphyta . -I^s. ^•.•? Fig. 293. ^, Vitis \Tilpina(odoratissima). 5, Vitis cinerea. i?, tendrils ; 5, eaves. After A. Mann. and then only gradually pushed to the side by the stronger growth of theiruppermost axillary shoot, but that they either from the first have the leaf-opposed position of the mature condition ^ or, that they proceed from theapex of the axis itself through its unequal division, and in this way the otherportion of the vine is formed ^. There occurs in the plant a rapid continua-tion of the vegetative skeleton whi


Organography of plants, especially of the archegoniatae and spermaphyta . -I^s. ^•.•? Fig. 293. ^, Vitis \Tilpina(odoratissima). 5, Vitis cinerea. i?, tendrils ; 5, eaves. After A. Mann. and then only gradually pushed to the side by the stronger growth of theiruppermost axillary shoot, but that they either from the first have the leaf-opposed position of the mature condition ^ or, that they proceed from theapex of the axis itself through its unequal division, and in this way the otherportion of the vine is formed ^. There occurs in the plant a rapid continua-tion of the vegetative skeleton which finds its expression in the behaviour ofthe vegetative point; whether we speak of a sympodium or a monopodiumdepends entirely upon what one chooses to express by these terms ^. Foliar origin of Shoots. The axillary shoot is, as has been said^,the product of the shoot-axis in many cases and becomes displaced upon thebase of the leaf. Koch is inclined to take this as the general rule but this ^ As this explanation is found in all textbooks I need not dwell upon it fur


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