Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAP. I Cereals of the Old World
- CHAP. II Cereals of the East and of the New World: General Conclusions
- CHAP. III Pasture, Sugar, and Scent
- CHAP. IV Bamboo: Vegetative Phase
- CHAP. V Bamboo: Tree Habit
- CHAP. VI Bamboo: Reproductive Phase
- CHAP. VII Bamboo: Spikelet and Fruit
- CHAP. VIII The Reproductive Shoot in Grasses: Structure and Anthesis
- CHAP. IX The Reproductive Shoot in Grasses: Compression and Sterilisation
- CHAP. X Individuality and Life-phases in Bamboo and Grass
- CHAP. XI The Grass Embryo and Seedling
- CHAP. XII The Vegetative Phase in Grasses: Root and Shoot
- CHAP. XIII The Vegetative Phase in Grasses: the Leaf
- CHAP. XIV The Gramineae and the Study of Morphological Categories
- CHAP. XV The Distribution and Dispersal of Grasses
- CHAP. XVI Maize and Townsend's Cord-grass: two Putative Hybrids
- CHAP. XVII Pattern and Rhythm in the Gramineae
- Taxonomic Table
- Bibliography
- Index
CHAP. XIV - The Gramineae and the Study of Morphological Categories
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- CHAP. I Cereals of the Old World
- CHAP. II Cereals of the East and of the New World: General Conclusions
- CHAP. III Pasture, Sugar, and Scent
- CHAP. IV Bamboo: Vegetative Phase
- CHAP. V Bamboo: Tree Habit
- CHAP. VI Bamboo: Reproductive Phase
- CHAP. VII Bamboo: Spikelet and Fruit
- CHAP. VIII The Reproductive Shoot in Grasses: Structure and Anthesis
- CHAP. IX The Reproductive Shoot in Grasses: Compression and Sterilisation
- CHAP. X Individuality and Life-phases in Bamboo and Grass
- CHAP. XI The Grass Embryo and Seedling
- CHAP. XII The Vegetative Phase in Grasses: Root and Shoot
- CHAP. XIII The Vegetative Phase in Grasses: the Leaf
- CHAP. XIV The Gramineae and the Study of Morphological Categories
- CHAP. XV The Distribution and Dispersal of Grasses
- CHAP. XVI Maize and Townsend's Cord-grass: two Putative Hybrids
- CHAP. XVII Pattern and Rhythm in the Gramineae
- Taxonomic Table
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The impulse to analyse the plant into component members seems, in the first instance, to have arisen out of the desire to establish a comparison between construction in the animal and the vegetable body; for the existence of a close analogy between the two was a fundamental postulate with the biologists of ancient Greece. The first extant attempt at such an analysis is, in some respects, strikingly alien to modern botanical thought. It is that of Theophrastus who, in the fourth century b.c., stated that “the primary and most important parts… are these—root, stem, branch, twig; these are the parts into which we might divide the plant, regarding them as members, corresponding to the members of animals: for each of these is distinct in character from the rest, and together they make up the whole”. Theophrastus then proceeds to distinguish, as subsidiary parts, the leaf, flower, fruit, etc. He was influenced in this discrimination by the fact that, in the tree, which he took as the standard of plant life, the trunk and its branches persist permanently, whereas the leaf, flower and fruit are ephemeral. The importance of the leaf was destined to remain for long unrecognised, and it was not until Goethe turned his attention to botany, more than two thousand years later, that the equivalence of the foliage leaves and the parts of the flower came fully into the light.
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- Information
- The GramineaeA Study of Cereal, Bamboo and Grass, pp. 307 - 331Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1934