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قراءة كتاب The Plants of Michigan Simple Keys for the Identification of the Native Seed Plants of the State

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‏اللغة: English
The Plants of Michigan
Simple Keys for the Identification of the Native Seed Plants of the State

The Plants of Michigan Simple Keys for the Identification of the Native Seed Plants of the State

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 3

of the author to make the key as nearly as possible proof against errors of judgment. For example, the Indian Turnip may be sought under either Group 3 or Group 4; the Matrimony Vine may be identified either as a shrub or as an herb, and numerous other similar examples may be discovered.

Botanical Information Needed. It is presumed that those using the book will be familiar with the parts of the flower and with the commoner descriptive terms applied to leaves. Unusual terms have been avoided as far as possible, but those which do occur, as well as the simpler ones, are explained in the glossary.

In general, only those characters have been used in the keys which can be observed without a magnifying glass and without dissection of the flower.

In several groups of plants, reference is made to the fuller descriptions to be found in the Manuals. The standard manuals for Michigan are Gray's New Manual of Botany, 7th edition (American Book Company, $2.50), and Britton and Brown, Illustrated Flora of the Northern States and Canada (Chas. Scribner's Sons, $13.50). These books may be consulted in most school or public libraries.

All dimensions are expressed in the metric system. For convenience, it may be stated that 25 millimeters (mm.) are about equal to one inch; 1 centimeter (cm.) to two-fifths of an inch; 1 decimeter (dm.) to 4 inches; and 1 meter (m.) is a little more than 3 feet.



KEY TO GROUPS

1a. Trees, shrubs, or woody climbers, with stems which last from year to year
1b. Herbaceous plants, with stems which live above ground only a single season — 2.
2a. Plants with unusual habits or structures, including leafless, colorless, submerged, floating, parasitic, or hollow-leaved plants
2b. Ordinary terrestrial or swamp plants, without unusual structural peculiarities — 3.
3a. Leaves parallel-veined (or net-veined in a few species); parts of the flower usually in threes or sixes, never in fives; wood-fibers scattered through the stem; seed with one cotyledon. All plants with definitely parallel-veined leaves may be identified through this division, unless the parts of the flower are distinctly in fives.
3b. Leaves net-veined (or parallel-veined in a few species); parts of the flower usually in fours or fives; wood-fibers arranged in a circle in the stem; seeds with two cotyledons. All plants with definitely net-veined leaves may be identified through this division.

Note:—In

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