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Research Results For 'Circinate'

CIRCINATE

In botany, circinate is a term said of leaves or fronds, as those of ferns, that are rolled up like a watch-spring before expanding.
Research Circinate

FERNS

The Ferns (Filices) are a natural order of cryptogamous or flowerless plants, forming the highest group of the acrogena or summit-growers. They are leafy plants, the leaves, or more properly fronds, arising from a rhizome or root-stock, or from a hollow arborescent trunk, and being circinate in vernation, a term descriptive of the manner in which the fronds are rolled up before they are developed in spring, having then the appearance of a bishop's crosier. On the veins of their lower surface, or their margins, the fronds bear small vessels named sporangia, containing spores. These spore-cases are arrangod in clusters, named sori, which are either naked or covered with a layer of the epidermis, which forms an involucre or indusium. When the spores germinate they produce a cellular structure of a leafy description, called the pro-embryo, or prothallus, upon which are developed organs which have received the names of antheridia and archegonia. When produced upon the prothallus these organs do not immediately give origin to a germinating spore, but from their mutual action proceeds a distinct cellular body, destined at a later period to develop into a fruit-bearing frond.

Ferns have a wide geographical range, but are most abundant in humid, temperate, and tropical regions. In the tropical forests the tree-ferns rival the palms, rising sometimes to a height of 15 or 18 metres. Ferns are very abundant as fossil plants. The earliest-known forms occur in Devonian rocks. Various systems of classification for ferns have been proposed over time. The order is usually divided into six or eight suborders or tribes distinguished by differences in the structure of the sporangium. The generic characters are founded on the position and direction of the sori and on the venation. The largest division is that of the Polypodiaceae, to which nearly all British ferns belong, such as the polypody, the lady-fern, the bracken, the hard-fern, the spleenwort, the maiden-hair, the hart's-tongue fern, etc. The royal fern, however, belongs to the Osmundaceae. A few of the ferns are used medicinally, mostly as demulcents and astringents. Some yield food. Pteris esculenta is the edible bracken of New Zealand.
Research Ferns

NARDOO

The nardoo (Marsilea macropus) is a pseudo-fern growing mostly in swampy ground, with a creeping rhizome and erect fronds, circinate when young. The spores and spore-cases are pounded and made into bread or porridge by the Aborigines of Australia.
Research Nardoo

 

 
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