Archive image from page 203 of Cyclopedia of American horticulture . Cyclopedia of American horticulture : comprising suggestions for cultivation of horticultural plants, descriptions of the species of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and ornamental plants sold in the United States and Canada, together with geographical and biographical sketches cyclopediaofame04bail Year: 1906 22S8. Natural planting of maple seeds. iiii. offered by Krelage. Haarlem, Holland, appears recognized by botanists.âS. Caldbricum is a name Hint description to an Italian species, which is still â Krelage.â5. debite, Wats


Archive image from page 203 of Cyclopedia of American horticulture . Cyclopedia of American horticulture : comprising suggestions for cultivation of horticultural plants, descriptions of the species of fruits, vegetables, flowers, and ornamental plants sold in the United States and Canada, together with geographical and biographical sketches cyclopediaofame04bail Year: 1906 22S8. Natural planting of maple seeds. iiii. offered by Krelage. Haarlem, Holland, appears recognized by botanists.âS. Caldbricum is a name Hint description to an Italian species, which is still â Krelage.â5. debite, Watson, an American species, (1 in 1881 by collectors, but is probably not in cult. â.S. Vouolasii. Hook., is a yellow-fld. species from ilet, the radicle and makee a fine setting for the wide as the latter. Height 1 ft.: Himalayas. Gn. 27, p. 317. W. M. SEEDAGE. Under this term may be included all knowledge respecting the propagation of plants by means of seeds or spores. The word was first used, so far as the writer is aware, in 1887. It is equivalent to the French semis, and is comparable with the words graftage, layerage and cuttageV In general literature and common speech, a seed is that part of the plant which is the outcome of flowering and which is used for propagating the species. In the technical or botanical sense, however, the seed is the ripened ovule. The seed contains an embryo, which is a miniature (The embryo has one or more leaves (cotyledons), a bhtl or growing point (plumule) and a short descendi (caulicle). From the caulicle or or root develops. This embryo is a minute dormant plant. Each embryo is the result of a distinct process of fertilization in which the pollen of the same or another flower has taken part. The ovule is contained in the ovary. The ripened ovary is the seed-case or pericarp. The peri- carp, with the parts that are amal- gamated with it, is known techni- cally as the fruit. In many instances there is only one seed in the fruit; an


Size: 1146px × 1746px
Photo credit: © Bookive / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: 1900, 1906, americana, archive, bailey_l_h_liberty_hyde_1858_1954, book, bookauthor, bookcentury, bookcollection, bookcontributor, bookdecade, bookpublisher, booksubject, bookyear, drawing, gardening, historical, history, horticulture, illustration, image, miller_wilhelm_1869_, ncsu_libraries, new_york_macmillan, page, picture, print, reference, vintage