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Illustrations of British Mycology : Containing Figures and Descriptions of the Funguses of Interest and Novelty Indigenous to Britain, PDF eBook

Illustrations of British Mycology : Containing Figures and Descriptions of the Funguses of Interest and Novelty Indigenous to Britain PDF

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Whilst the greatest effort has been made to ensure the quality of this text, due to the historical nature of this content, in some rare cases there may be minor issues with legibility.

In teaching any science, a clear exposition of principal facts is a necessary preliminary.

Some observations upon the arrangement of genera and species are required, as well as a statement of the characteristic parts of Funguses, to enable the reader to follow the descriptions of individual specimens with satisfaction However clear and significant the terse classical expressions of botanical science may be to the adept, they are cryptical to the uninitiated; to assign, however, precise equivalents for them in common language is so difficult, that the indulgence of the masters in cryptogamic lore is entreated for the attempt; it would be a much lighter task to adhere to accepted terms, than to render them intelligible to the student by translation.<br><br>Plants in which the fructifying organs are so minute, that without the aid of a powerful microscope, they cannot be detected.

To the naked eye, the fine dust ejected from the plant, is the only token of reproduction; this dust however is not truly seed, in the same manner that the term is used for Phenogamous plants, the word seed supposes the existence of an embryo, and there is no such thing in the reproductive bodies of Fungi.

The correct terms are spores, when the seeds are not in a case (naked); sporidia when enclosed in cases (thecae or asci).

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