RMMECTDF–. Die Gartenwelt . Lycopodium apiculatum.
RM2E35MWY–Lycopodium selago Atlas Alpenflora.
RFJ8G5WC–macro, close-up, macro admission, close up view, detail, isolated, stone, rock,
RM2AND302–Organography of plants, especially of the archegoniatae and spermaphyta . t of the Filicineae,but the formation of the leaves in the embryo isdelayed. It takes place, as in some Lycopodiawhich germinate underground, only to form aprotection to the apex of the shoot. Lyeopodineae. We have in this class bothmonocotylous and dicotylous embryos. The formerare found in Lycopodium Selago, L. inundatum(Fig. 140, 3), and L. cernuum, as well as in alliedforms. The latter are found in L. clavatum andL. annotinum. The difference may perhaps beconnected with the life-relationships, as hypogeousgerm-plants
RMW2R098–BB-0109 Lycopodium sitchense
RM2A83XB3–Banana tree and fruit, Musa paradisiaca a, muskroot, Adoxa moschatellina b, and wolf's foot moss, Lycopodium species c,d. Handcoloured mezzotint from Johan Wilhelm Weinmann's Phytanthoza Iconographia, Regensburg, 1737.
RMPFK97X–. Cyclopedia of practical floriculture. Floriculture; Flower language. CULTIVATION AND ANALVSIS OF PLANTS. ,^l0LF'S FOOT is the significance of the name Lycopodium, the scientific title of the family to which this genus Selaginella belongs. The faniil is commonly called Club Moss, and this genus West- ^' Intlia Moss, the finest specimens having been imported into Europe â ^fiom those legions. Though scientifically ranked with the Mosses, they are in reality a sort of intervening group or connecting link between the Mosies and the Ferns. Many of the species rise to no inconsiderable ' ;ht .iiu
RF2CW5T4K–ornamental green fern leaves in the jungle
RFGEGKCM–mountain tundra and forest at bottom of wonderful polar landscape
RFHYKP93–Beautiful, fresh creeping cedars in a natural habitat in early spring.
RMA5J160–Clubmoss closeup
RM2RTBG24–fir clubmoss, mountain clubmoss, fir-clubmoss (Huperzia selago, Lycopodium selago), group with sporangia, Netherlands, Drenthe
RMP9FR75–Banana tree and fruit, Musa paradisiaca a, muskroot, Adoxa moschatellina b, and wolf's foot moss, Lycopodium species c,d. Handcoloured mezzotint from Johan Wilhelm Weinmann's Phytanthoza Iconographia, Regensburg, 1737.
RM2AWTAD2–Text-book of botany, morphological and physiological . one kind of spores. Lycopodium, Tmesipteris, Phylloglossum, Psilotum. B. Selaginelleas, with two kinds of spores. Selaginella, Isoetes. LYCOPODIACEM. 417 As to the Forms of Tissue in Lycopodiaceae it may be remarked that the fibro-vascular bundles which penetrate the stem belong exclusively to it or are cauline. Theymay be followed in the procambial condition close beneath the apical cell to the apexof the stem and the youngest leaves. This I have found to be the case in Selaginellainaqiialiforia and Martensii and in Lycopodium Chayyicecy
RMW2R06H–BB-0112 Lycopodium carolinianum
RM2B8GW86–Selaginella jungermannioides fern. Lycopodium jungermannioides, Lycopodio a foglie di jungermannia. Handcoloured copperplate stipple engraving from Antoine Laurent de Jussieu's Dizionario delle Scienze Naturali, Dictionary of Natural Science, Florence, Italy, 1837. Illustration engraved by Stanghi, drawn and directed by Pierre Jean-Francois Turpin, and published by Batelli e Figli. Turpin (1775-1840) is considered one of the greatest French botanical illustrators of the 19th century.
RMPG2MW7–. The natural history of plants, their forms, growth, reproduction, and distribution;. Botany. 714 THE SUBDIVISIONS OF THE VEGETABLE KINGDOM. the latter their condition parallels that of the Hydropterides. Lepidodendracese and SigillariacesB are represented by fossil forms only. LycopodiacecB.—The Club-mosses proper include some 100 species, distributed over various parts of the globe. The habit of a typical Lycopodium is indicated in the accompanying figure of L. annotinuTn, with its branching stem closely set with simple, scale-like leaves and terminal cones. The species common in mountain r
RF2CW5RF1–ornamental fern leaves with spores in the botanical garden of Singapore
RFGPA2PY–Blue very small lake among mountain tundra. Valley stretches below
RFHYKN5D–Beautiful, fresh creeping cedars in a natural habitat in early spring.
RMA5J150–Clubmoss closeup
RM2RTBH88–fir clubmoss, mountain clubmoss, fir-clubmoss (Huperzia selago, Lycopodium selago), side view, with sporangia, Netherlands, Drenthe
RMKJXDFR–008 Lycopodium serratum tougeshiba
RMP6EED0–Wolf's-foot clubmoss, Lycopodium clavatum. Handcoloured copperplate engraving from Johannes Zorn's 'Icones plantarum medicinalium,' Germany, 1796. Zorn (1739-99) was a German pharmacist and botanist who travelled all over Europe searching for medicinal plants.
RM2AM2409–Monthly microscopical journal: transactions of the Royal Microscopical Society, and record of histological research at home and abroad . e cones which are the fruit of a tree called Lepidodendron,and compared them, by the aid of diagrams, with the Lycopodium andSelaginella of the present day. Other fossil cones were compared withthe Equisetum, or horse-tails, to which they are allied in structure.The ferns found in the coal-measures were then described, and Mr.Carruthers alluded to his discovery of a specimen exhibiting thepeculiar structure of the fruit. The fossil ferns were compared withthe
RMW2R07A–BB-0106 Lycopodium obscurum
RM2B8GWBA–West Indian treefern, Cyathea arborea, vine fern, Microgramma piloselloides 2, graceful fern, Niphidium crassifolium 3, coarse tassel fern, Huperzia phlegmaria 4, staghorn clubmoss, Lycopodiella cernua 5, water horsetail. Equisetum fluviatile, 6, Sphagnum latifolium 7. Handcoloured copperplate stipple engraving from Antoine Laurent de Jussieu's Dizionario delle Scienze Naturali, Dictionary of Natural Science, Florence, Italy, 1837. Illustration engraved by Corsi, drawn and directed by Pierre Jean-Francois Turpin, and published by Batelli e Figli. Turpin (1775-1840) is considered one of the gr
RMPG16P7–. Fossil plants : for students of botany and geology . Paleobotany. SPHENOPHYLLALES [CH. alternation of foliage leaves and sporophylls in Tmesipteris and in Lycopodium Selago. Another form of cone, also from the Middle Coal Measures, is referred by Kidston to Sphenophyllum trichomatosum Stur^ (fig. 113, B): this is characterised by the more horizontal position of the bracts, which " do not appear to be so much or so suddenly bent upwards in their distal portion as in some other species of Sphenophyllum" and by sessile sporangia borne singly on the upper face of each bract. A more rec
RF2CW5RM4–ornamental blue- green leaves in the botanical garden
RFGP4X66–mountain tundra and forest at bottom of wonderful polar landscape
RFHYKNNK–Beautiful, fresh creeping cedars in a natural habitat in early spring.
RM2RTBGR8–fir clubmoss, mountain clubmoss, fir-clubmoss (Huperzia selago, Lycopodium selago), side view, with sporangia, Netherlands, Drenthe
RMKBPRRP–EB1911 Pteridophyta Lycopodium clavatum
RMP6FA3R–Wolf's-foot clubmoss, Lycopodium clavatum. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by F. Guimpel from Dr. Friedrich Gottlob Hayne's Medical Botany, Berlin, 1822. Hayne (1763-1832) was a German botanist, apothecary and professor of pharmaceutical botany at Berlin University.
RM2AWTBE7–Text-book of botany, morphological and physiological . leby the arrangement of the cells near thepunctum vegetaiionis. Tmesipteris, which isallied to Psilotum, possesses, on the otherhand, large strong leaves. The Phylloiaxis is either spiral or de-cussate. In Isoetes the rosettes are arrangedspirally, with the divergences ^, jVj 2T if>the fractions becoming more complicated thelarger the number of leaves that are annually formed. In Lycopodium the arrangement is also spiral; and the number oforthostichies is frequently considerable; but not unfrequently the leaves form inthis genus pseudo-
RMW2R084–BB-0114 Lycopodium tristachyum
RMPG04R1–. The structure and development of mosses and ferns (Archegoniatae). Plant morphology; Mosses; Ferns. XIII LYCOPODINEjE 493 appear above the surface of the earth until several years have elapsed. The leaves developed upon these subterranean shoots are rudimentary. Sometimes more than one sporophyte is. borne by the prothallium (Fig. 284, B). The differentiation of the vascular cylinder begins about the time that the root breaks through the prothallial tissue. The hypocotyledonary part of the stele is diarch, but higher up four or five protoxylem groups are developed.. Fig. 286.—A, Lycopodium p
RF2CW5RXA–ornamental fern leaves over the bridge in jungle
RFGP4X85–mountain tundra and forest at bottom of wonderful polar landscape
RFHYKNMA–Beautiful, fresh creeping cedars in a natural habitat in early spring.
RM2RTBHFF–fir clubmoss, mountain clubmoss, fir-clubmoss (Huperzia selago, Lycopodium selago), side view, with sporangia, Netherlands, Drenthe
RMKBTXB2–Lycopodium clavatum annotinum nf
RMP9H9WY–Clubmoss, Lycopodium clavatum, and alpine clubmoss, Lycopodium alpinum. Handcoloured woodblock engraving of a botanical illustration from Adam Lonicer's Krauterbuch, or Herbal, Frankfurt, 1557. This from a 17th century pirate edition or atlas of illustrations only, with captions in Latin, Greek, French, Italian, German, and in English manuscript.
RM2AND5E9–Organography of plants, especially of the archegoniatae and spermaphyta . ers a feature of formation of organs that is limited to the germ-plantin Lycopodium inundatum and L. cernuum, and to the adventitiousshoots resembling those in L. inundatum. This view appears to me to beat the present time the most natural one, even though it rnay appear a heresyto the older morphology. Transition between Leaf and Shoot. I have frequently said that the behaviour of Utricularia is of specialinterest in the general consideration of the formation of organs, and I mustnow say something about it:— Lentibulari
RMW2R0A1–BB-0111 Lycopodium clavatum
RMPG0DD1–. Fossil plants : for students of botany and geology . Paleobotany. 86 LYCOPODIALES [CH. Selaginellites primaevus (Gold.). Fig. 135, A, fig. 138. 1855 Lycopodites primaevus, Goldenberg*. 1870 Lycopodium primaevum, Schimper^. 1907 Selagitiellites primaevus, Halle'.. Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.. Seward, A. C. (Albert Charles), 1863-1941. Cambridge : University Press
RF2CW5RAG–ornamental fern leaves in the botanical garden of Singapore
RFGRB25G–site of rocks and rare specific plants. Low camera position
RFHYKP54–Beautiful, fresh creeping cedars in a natural habitat in early spring.
RM2RTBG2A–fir clubmoss, mountain clubmoss, fir-clubmoss (Huperzia selago, Lycopodium selago), side view, with sporangia, Netherlands, Drenthe
RMP6FB36–Common club moss, Lycopodium clavatum. Handcoloured stipple copperplate engraving by Lambert Junior from a drawing by Pierre Jean-Francois Turpin from Chaumeton, Poiret and Chamberet's 'La Flore Medicale,' Paris, Panckoucke, 1830. Turpin (17751840) was one of the three giants of French botanical art of the era alongside Pierre Joseph Redoute and Pancrace Bessa.
RM2AG0DM3–. An encyclopædia of agriculture : comprising the theory and practice of the valuation, transfer, laying out, improvement, and management of landed property, and of the cultivation and economy of the animal and vegetable productions of agriculture. t is sometimes eaten by the inha-bitants ; and Dr. Clarke, having tasted it, foundit crisp and agreeable. 697. RocceUla tinctoria (Jig. 86.), which aboundsnear Gottenburg and in other parts of Sweden,was in considerable demand in the early part of last war as a scarlet dye. 698. The Lycopodium complanatum (Jig. 86.)is employed in dyeing their woolle
RMW2R06Y–BB-0108 Lycopodium alpinum
RMPG051F–. The structure and development of mosses and ferns (Archegoniatae). Plant morphology; Mosses; Ferns. Fig. .^59.—A, Female prothallium with the ilrst archegonium (ar), X70; B, male pro- thallium, X70. however, the prothallium while still small has a somewhat cy- lindrical body composed of several layers of cells, and in these the rhizoids are mainly confined to the base. The chloroplasts which these at first contain are gradually changed into leuco- plasts, and may be completely absorbed (Buchtien (i), p. 17). A comparison of the gametophyte with that of Lycopodium cernuum has been made (Jeffr
RF2D0XFXG–tropical plants with stone path in the botanical garden in Singapore
RFGPP54T–mountain tundra near sea coast wonderful polar landscape
RFHYKP52–Beautiful, fresh creeping cedars in a natural habitat in early spring.
RM2RTBH8T–fir clubmoss, mountain clubmoss, fir-clubmoss (Huperzia selago, Lycopodium selago), side view, with sporangia, Netherlands, Drenthe
RMP6ECET–Wolf's-foot clubmoss, Lycopodium clavatum var. borbonicum, native to Africa. Handcoloured copperplate stipple engraving from Jussieu's 'Dictionary of Natural Science,' Florence, Italy, 1837. Engraved by Corsi, drawn by Pierre Jean-Francois Turpin, and published by Batelli e Figli. Turpin (1775-1840) is considered one of the greatest French botanical illustrators of the 19th century.
RMMECYX6–. Die Gartenwelt . Lycopodium pinifolium oder Dalhousianum?
RMP8DMRR–518 Lycopodium complanatum.
RM2ANJJ0H–The Hahnemannian monthly . on, stinging andburning pain ; oedema. Hepar sulph.—To promote or prevent suppuration. Other remedies which may be required are Euphorbium,Carbo veg., Lachesis, Lycopodium and Sulphur. When pyaemia results from erysipelas, the treatment mustbe adapted to that complication. Alcohol as a remedy and as a food may be required, as inpuerperal cases and others where the vital powers are rapidlydepressed. Given early, alcohol probably acts, not only as astimulant to the vital forces, but as an antidote to the poisonwhich feeds the disease. In ordinary simple cases, however,
RMW2R074–BB-0107 Lycopodium annotinum
RMPG4123–. The essentials of botany. Botany. PTEBIDOPHTTA. 209 are all of one kind, and are borne in roundish spore-cases, â which are generally single on each leaf. The Club-mosses are commoa in the Appalachian region, Canada, and northwestward, and all but one of our species belong to the genus Lycopodium. Of these may be mentioned the Common Club- mosses (L. clavatum and L. complanatum) and the Ground-pine (L. dendroideum), all extensively used in Christmas decorations. 438. The Little Club-Mosses {Order Selaginellaceoe) re- semble the foregoing, but are generally smaller and more Moss-like, and hav
RF2CW6EDJ–red-leaf fern in the jungle. Malaysia
RFGPP5CY–mountain tundra and forest at bottom of wonderful polar landscape
RFHYKPE1–Beautiful, fresh creeping cedars in a natural habitat in early spring.
RMP6G4YC–Tree groundpine or tree-like club moss, Lycopodium dendroideum. Handcoloured copperplate engraving by J. Swan after a botanical illustration by William Jackson Hooker from his own 'Exotic Flora,' Blackwood, Edinburgh, 1823. Hooker (1785-1865) was an English botanist who specialized in orchids and ferns, and was director of the Royal Botanical Gardens at Kew from 1841.
RMMECTE9–. Die Gartenwelt . Lycopodium squarrosum var. epiceaefolium. i
RMP8DMPW–516 Lycopodium selago.
RM2ANCJR8–The outlines of physics: an elementary text-book . If a small l^iiin^ 3) Fig. 336. quantity of lycopodium powder be introduced into thistube, and distributed throughout its length, and if thetube be then placed horizontally, and be strongly blown 368 THE OUTLINES OF PHYSICS for an instant, it will be found that the dust tends toarrange itself in the form of equidistant transverse ridges.These ridges lie in the nodes of the wave. (See Fig. 336.) 334. The Manometric Flame. — This is an ingenious de-vice for studying the vibrations in organ pipes and otherwind instruments. An opening in the wallo
RMW2R079–BB-0104 Lycopodium adpressum
RMPG1Y08–. Lectures on the evolution of plants. Botany; Plants. PTEEIDOPHYTA 145 In Selaginella (Fig. 38), while the embryo closely resembles that of Lycopodium, the gametophyte is very different. The sporophyte produces two sorts of spores, large and small. The former, the macrospores, produce a rudimentary gametophyte, which bears only archegonia (Fig. 38, E). The gametophyte projects from the spore but little, and until its later stages is contained entirely within the macrospore. In germination there are first. Fig. 38 (Lycopodinese). — A, a branch of one of the smaller club-mosses (Selaginella) wi
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