Botanical Gazette, Volume 13University of Chicago Press, 1888 Publishes research in all areas of the plant sciences. |
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... insects An acknowledgement 18 , 39 , 63 , 98 , 131 , 161 , 192 , 215 , 243 , 274 On some mistaken estimates made by amateurs The death of Dr. DeBary Typha An odd Fuchsia Fragrance of flowers Revision of N. A. species of Fissidens An ...
... insects An acknowledgement 18 , 39 , 63 , 98 , 131 , 161 , 192 , 215 , 243 , 274 On some mistaken estimates made by amateurs The death of Dr. DeBary Typha An odd Fuchsia Fragrance of flowers Revision of N. A. species of Fissidens An ...
Page 33
... insects and birds . While in continued flight they seem to have little difficulty in moving with the wind , in rising and lighting they use their wings with more precision when their faces are turned against it . ' Thus , if a bee comes ...
... insects and birds . While in continued flight they seem to have little difficulty in moving with the wind , in rising and lighting they use their wings with more precision when their faces are turned against it . ' Thus , if a bee comes ...
Page 34
... insect to light . It must be tantalizing to a bee for the head to fly up and leave her suspended in mid - air . In ... insects . In September , 1886 , I found several hundred stalks of Physostegia Virginiana arranged in a long patch ...
... insect to light . It must be tantalizing to a bee for the head to fly up and leave her suspended in mid - air . In ... insects . In September , 1886 , I found several hundred stalks of Physostegia Virginiana arranged in a long patch ...
Page 39
... insects . On page 111 , 1887 , of the GAZETTE I suggested that botanists note all cases in which insects mutilate flowers for the purpose of securing the nectar ; and that the insects be captured , and their scientific names be ...
... insects . On page 111 , 1887 , of the GAZETTE I suggested that botanists note all cases in which insects mutilate flowers for the purpose of securing the nectar ; and that the insects be captured , and their scientific names be ...
Page 72
... insects they contain . In a note to the Gardeners ' Chronicle ( January 21 ) , Mr. Watson suggests that the secretion found in the pitchers is not necessary to the destruction of the insects caught in them , as the enormous mass of ...
... insects they contain . In a note to the Gardeners ' Chronicle ( January 21 ) , Mr. Watson suggests that the secretion found in the pitchers is not necessary to the destruction of the insects caught in them , as the enormous mass of ...
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Common terms and phrases
abundant acuminate Agriculture alcohol American anthers apex appears Asa Gray base bees Benth Boott botanical botanists bractlets bracts branches California capsule cells characters chlorophyll Club collected contains corolla DeBary described Disporum distributed erect feet flora flowers fruit fungi fungus garden GAZETTE genera genus George Vasey glabrous growing growth herbarium host imbedding inches long insects interesting involucre islands Journal laboratory lanceolate layer leaves less lines broad lines long lobes microscope microtome mountains nearly nectary North notes oblong observed ovate oxygen Panicle paper paraffin pedicels peduncles periderm perithecia Peronospora petals petioles phellogen plants plates pollen Prof Professor published racemes roots sections seeds sepals sessile side species specimens spikes sporangium spores stamens stamens and styles stem stigma surface THOMAS MORONG tion tissue trees upper usually Vasey vegetable wall wings
Popular passages
Page 184 - All Nature is but art, unknown to thee All chance, direction, which thou canst not see; All discord, harmony not understood; All partial evil, universal good: And, spite of pride, in erring reason's spite, One truth is clear, Whatever is, is right.
Page 64 - I never before longed so much to know the names of things as during this visit to Ilfracombe. The desire is part of the tendency that is now constantly growing in me to escape from all vagueness and inaccuracy into the daylight of distinct vivid ideas.
Page 139 - ... continental areas, and they founded herbaria and libraries, each in his own country, which have become permanent and quasi-national institutions. - - - There is much in their lives and works that recalls the career of Linnaeus, of whom they were worthy disciples, in the comprehensiveness of their labor, the excellence of their methods, their judicious conception of the limits of genera and species, the terseness and accuracy of their descriptions, and the clearness of their scientific language.
Page 183 - ... one who is scientifically, and in his own fashion, a Darwinian, philosophically a convinced theist, and religiously an acceptor of the ' creed commonly called the Nicene,' as the exponent of the Christian faith.
Page 48 - With these results in view, it seems idle to discuss further the influence of forests upon rain-fall from the economic point of view, as it is evidently too slight to be of the least practical importance. Man has not yet invented a method of controlling rain-fall.
Page 232 - President appointed as a committee to nominate officers for the ensuing year Messrs.
Page 232 - GRAY. Resolved, That though among the last to contribute to the wreath of sorrow with which science is everywhere crowning the memory of Dr. GRAY, this body takes a mournful pride in remembering that he was one of its honored members, and that it was as a botanist he won such eminent renown. We feel that we have a right to be among the chief mourners at his departure from the field of labor he loved so well, and in a special degree to unite our sympathies with the many thousands who miss him everywhere.
Page 217 - No. 5. Report on the Experiments made in 1887 in the Treatment of the Downy Mildew and the Black-rot of the Grape Vine; with a chapter on the Apparatus for Applying Remedies for these Diseases.
Page 328 - THE PROCEEDINGS of the Society for the Promotion of Agricultural Science for the 1888 meeting have been distributed.
Page 64 - The proper arrangement, for example, of a code of laws, depends on the same scientific conditions as the classifications in natural history; nor could there be a better preparatory discipline for that important function, than the study of the principles of a natural arrangement, not only in the abstract, but in their actual application to the class of phenomena for which they were first elaborated, and which are still the best school for learning their use.