10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «ACOTYLEDONOUS»
Discover the use of
acotyledonous in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
acotyledonous and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
A Pocket Botanical Dictionary
OF ACOTYLEDONOUS PLANTS. Acotyledonous plants are those in which the
seed lobes are either absent or indistinct. They have no seminal leaves, and
consequently the structure or organization of their seeds (sporules) are very
different ...
Sir Joseph Paxton, John Lindley, 1838
2
Elements of Botany: Or, Outlines of the Natural History of ...
The Fuci (Phycei) and the Lichenes are considered by Acha- rius, as esexual {
planta esexuales), and acotyledonous plants, whose fructification and
fecundation are either not manifest, or obscure. Of the Lichenes, however, this
industrious ...
Benjamin Smith Barton, 1814
3
A dictionary of science, literature and art, ed. by W.T. ...
ACOTYLEDONOUS. properly so called, but which are propagated by undivided
spheroidal bodies called spores. The word aeotyledon is occasionally used for
such plants as Cwmtta, Cactus, &c., whose embryo, although really of the same ...
Dictionary, William Thomas Brande, 1865
4
The Elements of Botany ... Translated by J. H. Wilson
Several of the herbaceous acotyledonous plants which we have mentioned
above, Ferns, Lycopodiaceae, Marsiliaceae, also appear to be ramified; but this
is always, as in the preceding case, by the doubling of the extremity, and not by
the ...
Adrien de Jussieu, James Hewetson WILSON, 1849
Several of the herbaceous acotyledonous plants which we have mentioned
above, Ferns, Lycopodiaceee, Marsiliacese, also appear to be ramified ; but this
is always, as in the preceding case, by the doubling of the extremity, and not by
the ...
Adrien de Jussieu, James Hewetson Wilson, 1849
6
London and Edinburgh Philosophical Magazine and Journal of ...
Monoperigynae. v XIII. Monoepigynae. GROUP II. ACOTYLEDONOUS PLANTS.
—-— Cellular, or, if vascular, without spiral tubes ?—Cryptogamous. ,Class XIV.
Ductulosae. —Cellular, with interspersed ducts,—seminiferous. XV. Eductulosee.
7
Peter Parley's Cyclopedia of Botany: Including Familiar ...
OF ACOTYLEDONOUS PLANTS. Acotyledonous plants are those in which the
seed lobes are either absent or indistinct. They have no seminal leaves, and
consequently the structure or organization of their seeds (sporules) are very
different ...
Samuel Griswold Goodrich, 1838
8
The London and Edinburgh Philosophical Magazine and Journal ...
They agree in point of number, but not in point of specific extent, with the
arrangements of modern botanists, by which plants are reduced to three grand
orders depending upon the structure of their seeds — the acotyledonous, the
monocoty- ...
9
The Magazine of Botany & Gardening, British and Foreign ...
SMITH'S STUDY OF BOTANY, BY HOOKER. PROFESSOR BURNETT'S
OUTLINES OF. 102 fifteen classes, of which one is acotyledonous, three are
monocotyledonous, and the remaining eleven are dicotyledonous. In order to
comprehend ...
James Rennie, James Burnett, 1833
10
Magazine of Botany and Gardening British and Foreign: ...
It will be seen," he says, " that Jussieu commences his arrangement by the most
simple of vegetable beings, namely, the acotyledonous or cryptogamic plants. To
this Professor De Candolle objects, they being, he justly says, the least ...
James Rennie, James Burnett, 1833