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قراءة كتاب Manual of the Trees of North America (Exclusive of Mexico) 2nd ed.
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Manual of the Trees of North America (Exclusive of Mexico) 2nd ed.
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tag="{http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml}a">p. 753). Flowers perfect; sepals 3; petals 5; filaments united into a tube; fruit a berry; leaves simple, alternate, without stipules, persistent.
B. Ovary inferior (partly inferior in Rhizophora).
- XLV. Cactaceæ (p. 757). Flowers perfect; petals and sepals numerous; fruit a berry; leaves usually wanting.
- XLVI. Rhizophoraceæ (p. 763). Flowers perfect; calyx 4-parted; petals 4; ovary partly inferior; fruit a 1-celled 1-seeded berry perforated at apex by the germinating embryo; leaves simple, opposite, entire, with stipules, persistent.
- XLVII. Combretaceæ (p. 764). Flowers perfect or polygamous; calyx 5-lobed; petals 5 (0 in Conocarpus); fruit drupaceous; leaves simple, alternate or opposite, without stipules, persistent.
- XLVIII. Myrtaceæ (p. 768). Flowers perfect; calyx usually 4-lobed, or reduced to a single body forming a deciduous lid to the flower (Chytraculia); petals usually 4 (0 in Chytraculia); fruit a berry; leaves simple, opposite, pellucid-punctate, without stipules, persistent.
- XLIX. Melastomaceæ (p. 776). Flowers perfect; calyx and corolla 4 or 5-lobed; stamens as many or twice as many as the lobes of the corolla; fruit capsular or baccate, inclosed in the tube of the calyx; leaves opposite, rarely verticillate, 3—9-nerved, without stipules.
- L. Araliaceæ (p. 777). Flowers perfect or polygamous; sepals and petals usually 5; fruit a drupe; leaves twice pinnate, alternate, with stipules, deciduous.
- LI. Nyssaceæ (p. 779). Flowers diœcious, polygamous, diœcious or perfect; calyx 5-toothed or lobed; petals 5 or more, imbricate in the bud, or 0; stamens as many or twice as many as the petals; fruit drupaceous (Nyssa), usually 1-celled and 1-seeded; leaves alternate, deciduous, without stipules.
- LII. Cornaceæ (p. 784). Flowers perfect or polygamo-diœcious; calyx 4 or 5-toothed; petals 4 or 5; fruit a fleshy drupe; leaves simple, opposite (alternate in one species of Cornus), without stipules, deciduous.
Section 2. Gamopetalæ. Corolla of united petals (divided in Elliottia in Ericaceæ, 0 in some species of Fraxinus in Oleaceæ).
A. Ovary superior (inferior in Vaccinium in Ericaceæ, partly inferior in Symplocaceæ and Styracaceæ).
- LIII. Ericaceæ (p. 790). Flowers perfect; calyx and corolla 5-lobed (in Elliottia corolla of 4 petals); (ovary inferior in Vaccinium); fruit capsular, drupaceous or baccate; leaves simple, alternate, without stipules, persistent (deciduous in Elliottia and Oxydendrum).
- LIV. Theophrastaceæ (p. 804). Flowers perfect, with staminodia; sepals and petals 5; stamens 5; fruit a berry; leaves simple, opposite or alternate, entire, without stipules.
- LV. Myrsinaceæ (p. 805). Flowers perfect; calyx and corolla 5-lobed; stamens 5; fruit a drupe; leaves simple, alternate, entire, without stipules, persistent.
- LVI. Sapotaceæ (p. 808). Flowers perfect; calyx 5-lobed; corolla 5-lobed (6-lobed in Mimusops), often with as many or twice as many internal appendages borne on its throat; fruit a berry; leaves simple, alternate, without stipules, persistent (deciduous in some species of Bumelia).
- LVII. Ebenaceæ (p. 820). Flowers perfect, diœcious, or polygamous; calyx and corolla 4-lobed; fruit a 1 or several-seeded berry; leaves simple, alternate, entire, without stipules, deciduous.
- LVIII. Styraceæ (p. 824). Flowers perfect; calyx 4 or 5-toothed; corolla 4 or 5-lobed or divided nearly to the base, or rarely 6 or 7-lobed; ovary superior or partly superior; fruit a drupe; leaves simple, alternate, without stipules, deciduous; pubescence mostly scurfy or stellate.
- LIX. Symplocaceæ (p. 830). Flowers perfect; calyx and corolla 5-lobed; ovary inferior or partly inferior; fruit a drupe; leaves simple, alternate, without stipules, deciduous; pubescence simple.
- LX. Oleaceæ (p. 832). Flowers perfect or polygamo-diœcious; calyx 4-lobed (0 in some species of Fraxinus); corolla 2—6-parted (0 in some species of Fraxinus); fruit a winged samara (Fraxinus) or a fleshy drupe (Forestiera, Chionanthus and Osmanthus); leaves pinnate (Fraxinus) or simple, opposite, without stipules, deciduous (persistent in Osmanthus).
- LXI. Borraginaceæ (p. 858). Flowers perfect or polygamous; calyx and corolla 5-lobed; fruit a drupe; leaves simple, alternate, scabrous-pubescent, without stipules, persistent or tardily deciduous.
- LXII. Verbenaceæ (p. 864). Flowers perfect; calyx 5-lobed; corolla 4 or 5-lobed; fruit a drupe or a 1-seeded capsule; leaves simple, opposite, without stipules, persistent.
- LXIII. Solanaceæ (p. 867). Flowers perfect; calyx campanulate, usually 5-lobed; corolla usually 5-lobed; fruit baccate, surrounded at base by the enlarged calyx; leaves alternate, rarely opposite, without stipules.
- LXIV. Bignoniaceæ (p. 868). Flowers perfect; calyx bilabiate; corolla bilabiate, 5-lobed; fruit a woody capsule (Catalpa and Chilopsis) or a berry (Enallagma); leaves simple, opposite (sometimes alternate in Chilopsis), without stipules, deciduous (persistent in Enallagma).
B. Ovary inferior (partly superior in Sambucus in Caprifoliaceæ).
- LXV. Rubiaceæ (p. 875). Flowers perfect; calyx and corolla 4 or 5-lobed; fruit a capsule (Exostema and Pinckneya), a drupe (Guettarda), or nut-like (Cephalanthus); leaves simple opposite, or in verticils of 3 (Cephalanthus), with stipules, persistent (deciduous in Pinckneya and Cephalanthus).
- LXVI. Caprifoliaceæ (p. 882). Flowers perfect; calyx and corolla 5-lobed; fruit a drupe; leaves unequally pinnate (Sambucus) or simple (Viburnum), opposite, without stipules, deciduous in North American species.
ANALYTICAL KEY
TO THE GENERA OF PLANTS INCLUDED IN THIS BOOK, BASED CHIEFLY ON THE CHARACTER OF THE LEAVES
- I. Leaves parallel-veined, alternate, persistent, clustered at the end of the stem or branches. Monocotyledons.
- Stem simple; leaves stalked.
- Leaves fan-shaped.
- Leaf stalks unarmed.
- Rachis short; leaves usually silvery white below.
- Leaves 2°—4° in diameter (green below in No. 2), their segments undivided at apex.
- Thrinax (p. 96).
- Leaves 18′—24′ in diameter, their segments divided at apex.
- Coccothrinax (p. 100).
- Rachis elongated; leaves green below, their segments divided at apex.
- Sabal (p. 101).
- Leaf stalks armed with marginal teeth or spines.
- Leaf stalks furnished irregularly with broad thin large and small, straight or hooked spines confluent into a thin bright orange-colored cartilaginous margin; leaves longer than wide, divided nearly to the middle into segments parted at apex and separating on the margins into thin fibres.
- Washingtonia (p. 104).
- Leaf stalks furnished with stout or slender flattened teeth; leaves suborbicular, divided to the middle or nearly to the base into segments parted at apex; segments of the blade not separating on the margin into thin fibres.
- Acœlorraphe (p. 105).
- Leaves pinnate.
- Leaves 10°—12° in length, their pinnæ 2½°—3° long and often 1½° wide, deep green.
- Roystonea (p. 107).
- Leaves 5°—6° long, their pinnæ 18′ long and 1′ wide, dark yellow-green above, pale and glaucous below.
- Pseudophœnix (p. 109).
- Stem simple or branched; leaves sessile, lanceolate, long- and usually sharp-pointed at apex.
- Yucca (p. 110).
- II. Leaves 1-nerved, needle-shaped, linear or scale-like, persistent (deciduous in Larix and Taxodium). Gymnospermæ.
- 1. Leaves Persistent.
- a Leaves fascicled, needle-shaped, in 1—5-leafed clusters enclosed at base in a membranaceous sheath.
- Pinus (p. 2).
- aa Leaves scattered, usually linear.
- b Leaves linear, often obtuse or emarginate.
- Base of the leaves persistent on the branches.
- Leaves sessile, 4-sided, or flattened and stomatiferous above.
- Picea (p. 34).
- Leaves stalked, flattened and stomatiferous below, or angular, often appearing 2-ranked.
- Tsuga (p. 42).
- Base of the leaves not persistent on the branches; leaves often appearing 2-ranked.
- Leaves stalked, flattened, stomatiferous below; winter-buds pointed, not resinous.
- Pseudotsuga (p. 47).
- Leaves sessile, flattened and often grooved on the upper side, or quadrangular, rarely stomatiferous above, on upper fertile branches often crowded; winter-buds obtuse, resinous (except in No. 9).
- Abies (p. 50).
- bb Leaves linear-lanceolate, rigid, acuminate, spirally disposed, appearing 2-ranked by a twist in the petiole.
- Leaves abruptly contracted at base, long-pointed, with pale bands of stomata on the lower surface on each side of the midveins; fruit drupe-like.
- Torreya (p. 91).

