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. XVII - Pattern and Rhythm in the Gramineae
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 grass family is remarkable both for its naturalness and for its distinctness from neighbouring groups. Though other families have sometimes been included with it in the order Glumales or Glumiflorae, the most recent tendency is to treat it as a group apart, and to regard the resemblances which it shows, for instance, to the Sedge family (Cyperaceae), as indicating parallel development rather than affinity. If this view be accepted, I should like to suggest that the established word Gramineae might be retained for the order; the name Graminaceae could then perhaps be used for the only family included in this order.
Within the group itself, classification presents special difficulties; the subdivisions have even been described as “complétement artificielles”. The species are very numerous—they are estimated as 8000, or even more, grouped in about 550 genera—and their structural characteristics do not lend themselves to any obvious classificatory scheme. Indeed, as Kunth wrote, more than a hundred years ago, “dans les families eminemment naturelles, comme celles des Graminées, … on ne trouve que très-peu de caractères … qui puissent servir à distinguer les genres, et le plus souvent ces caractéres sont aussi vagues que minutieux”. In classifying the grasses, botanists have thus been obliged to rely, even more than usual, upon that intuitive faculty for detecting affinities, which can be cultivated to a high pitch by “la grande habitude de voir”. There is nothing magical about this faculty; it is the subconscious result of long labour acting upon an instinctive interest.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The GramineaeA Study of Cereal, Bamboo and Grass, pp. 380 - 409Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1934