. Botany of the living plant. Botany. 48 BOTANY OF THE LIVING PLANT fascicular, and those between them inter-fascicular cambium { Fig. 25). In woody stems where the strands are closely grouped, this distinction is not so obvious. The cambium is recognised by the repeated division of its thin- walled cells by tangential walls, so that radial rows of cells are produced. As there is no Hmit to the repeated divisions, a great increase of the tissues may be the result. The clearest evidence of division is in the centre of each radial row, and it has been concluded from careful. Fig. 34. Cross s


. Botany of the living plant. Botany. 48 BOTANY OF THE LIVING PLANT fascicular, and those between them inter-fascicular cambium { Fig. 25). In woody stems where the strands are closely grouped, this distinction is not so obvious. The cambium is recognised by the repeated division of its thin- walled cells by tangential walls, so that radial rows of cells are produced. As there is no Hmit to the repeated divisions, a great increase of the tissues may be the result. The clearest evidence of division is in the centre of each radial row, and it has been concluded from careful. Fig. 34. Cross section through a radial row of cambial zone in Pinus sylvestris, after Sanio. ( x 400.) H=side next the wood. t = the conjectural initial cell. (From De Bary.). 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 Bower, F. O. (Frederick Orpen), 1855-1948. London, Macmillan


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectbotany, bookyear1919