. A class-book of botany; designed for colleges, academies, and other seminaries ... illustrated by a flora of the northern, middle, and western states; particularly of the United States north of the capitol, lat. 38 3/4 o. Botany; Plants -- United States; Plants -- Canada. CYME. 105 rays answering to petals, and the involucre (254) to the calyx. The flowers are called florets, those in the outer circle, florets of the ray, and those of the central portions, florets of the disk. 304. The panicle is a compound inflorescence, formed by an irregular branching of the pedicels of the raceme. Ex. oa


. A class-book of botany; designed for colleges, academies, and other seminaries ... illustrated by a flora of the northern, middle, and western states; particularly of the United States north of the capitol, lat. 38 3/4 o. Botany; Plants -- United States; Plants -- Canada. CYME. 105 rays answering to petals, and the involucre (254) to the calyx. The flowers are called florets, those in the outer circle, florets of the ray, and those of the central portions, florets of the disk. 304. The panicle is a compound inflorescence, formed by an irregular branching of the pedicels of the raceme. Ex. oats, Poa, and many other grasses. 305. The thyrse is the same as the panicle, having the lower branches rather shorter than those in the midst, and all of them ver}'^ compact, as in the lilac (Syringa), horse-chestnut. a. The umbel becomes compound when each pedicel becomes itself an umbel, as in most of the Umbclliferae. In these cases the secondary umbels are called umbellets, and sometimes partial lanbek. See § 254. By a similar decomposition, a raceme becomes a compound raceme, a cor^niib a compound corymb, FIG. 33. — Modes of inflorescence ; 1, raceme; 2, ament; 3, spadix ; 4, head; 5, panicle ; 6, verticillaster; 7, thyrse. 306. Of the centrifugal inflorescence, the following varieties are described; namely, cyme, fascicle, and verticillaster. 307. Cyme. Tliis inflorescence has the general aspect of the coiymb, but is remarkably distinguished from it by its centrifu- gal evolution, and by its branches being repeatedly 2-forked and 3-forked, as exemplified in Hydrangea, Viburnum, chick- weed. a. The cjTne is found only in plants with opposite leaves, and its nonnal struc- ture and develonment are as follow? The terminal flower, wliich is the first to. 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 wor


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, bookpublisher, booksubjectbotany