RMF0N6A2–Common liverwort (Jungermannia polymorpha) and Dotted thyme-moss (Rhizomnium punctatum) Eileburg, Consdorf, Mullerthal, Luxembourg, May 2009
RFT5YMP2–This is a Elaters of Jungermannia.The plants have spreading, roundish flank leaves, vintage line drawing or engraving illustration.
RM2BNDD45–Endive Pellia liverwort (Pellia endiviifolia) in centre growing through Common Liverwort (Marchantia polymorpha), the latter bearing cups containing g
RF2J4YDH6–Jungermannia complanata, Flachblättriges Kratzmoos, Historisch, historical, digital improved reproduction of an original from the 19th century / digital restaurierte Reproduktion einer Originalvorlage aus dem 19. Jahrhundert, genaues Originaldatum nicht bekannt
RM2BT5KA2–Leafy liverworts, Jungermannia epiphylla 1 and Jungermannia asplenoides 2, and Malabar nut or adulsa, Justicia adhatoda 3. Jungermannes, Justicia. Handcoloured steel engraving by August Dumenil after an illustration by A. Carie Baron from Felix-Edouard Guerin-Meneville's Dictionnaire Pittoresque d'Histoire Naturelle (Picturesque Dictionary of Natural History), Paris, 1834-39.
RF2BE0NNP–Hepaticae (Marchantiophyta) from Ernst Haeckel's Kunstformen der Natur, 1904
RMP5RAFC–N/A. English: As file Leptomorphus walkeriCurtis, 1831 (Southgate Crane-fly) Mycetophilidae. The plant is Jungermannia epiphylla . 1836. John Curtis 237 Britishentomologyvolume7Plate365
RM2AJCRT4–Elementary botany . Fig. 272.Antheridium of a foliose liverwort (jungermannia).
RMBNC61B–Botanical print from Manual of Botany of the Northern United States, Asa Gray, 1889. Plate XXV, Genera of Hepaticae.
RMRYXBXK–Leafy liverworts, Jungermannia epiphylla 1 and Jungermannia asplenoides 2, and Malabar nut or adulsa, Justicia adhatoda 3. Jungermannes, Justicia. Handcoloured steel engraving by August Dumenil after an illustration by A. Carie Baron from Felix-Edouard Guerin-Meneville's Dictionnaire Pittoresque d'Histoire Naturelle (Picturesque Dictionary of Natural History), Paris, 1834-39.
RMPG01JP–. The principles of botany, as exemplified in the Cryptogamia. For the use of schools and colleges. Cryptogams; Plant anatomy; 1853. 66 COMPOUND OKGANS OP PLANTS. Fig. 28.. a. Jungermannia complanata in fruit, natural size. h. The fruit magnifieil, allowing the perichEetium or sheath, at the base, the peduncle rising from it, and the capsule at its summit not yet burst, c. The capsule split at its apex, and discharging its spores, d. The capsule empty, showing its four valves. situations, and which may be found in fruit from January to April. 79. The spores of these plants are often mixed with
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.
RFMPTJYP–bright green juicy fresh leaf of fern (actually hepatic moss Jungermannia lycopodioides) on a dark blurry plant background
RFT5YY75–This is cellular spore-stalk of a Jungermannia and it is surrounded at base by some of the leaves, vintage line drawing or engraving illustration.
RM2BDMK75–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros
RMMA72RG–. Elementary botany . Fig. 189. Foliose liverwort, male plant showing anthe- ridia in axils of the leaves (a jungermannia).
RM2ANBFJN–Handbook of British Hepaticae : containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia and Anthoceros .
RMPG3HT3–. Mosses with a hand-lens; a non-technical handbook of the more common and more easily recognized mosses of the north-eastern United States. Mosses. MOSSES WITH A HAND-LENS i8s ^mLEAI'ES SUCCUBOUS, ENTIRE. MARKEDLY LONGER THAN BROAD. JUNGERMANNIA. J. LANCEOLATA L. (Lioch- lacna lanceolata of many au- thors) is a common species • on rotten logs and banks. The leaves are recurved at apex when dry as in JamsonicUa, but the plants are fully twice as wide and the leaves are much longer than broad. Sterile it may be confused Figure 117. Jungermannia lanceolata; , u i. -^i portion of sterile stem X 2
RM2BDMK71–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros
RM2T69YEF–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.
RMMA72K0–. Elementary botany . Fig. 192. Fruiting plant of a foliose liver- pjg jg. wort (jungermannia). Leafy part is the gametophyte ; stalk and cap- Four spores from Elaters, at left showing the two sule is the sporophyte (sporogonium mother cell held in spiral marks, at right a branched in the bryophytes). a group. elater. Figs. 193-196.—Sporogonium of liverwort (jungermannia) opening by splitting into four parts, showing details of elaters and spores.
RM2ANB3XX–Handbook of British Hepaticae : containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia and Anthoceros . 98. HANDBOOK OF BRITISH HEPATIC/E. 141 tial leaves large, entirely sheathing with their basethe lower part of the calyx, which latter is ratherattenuated at the base, longitudinally plicate at the.
RMH2X9E4–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros BHL229
RM2BDMK6A–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros
RMMEFT4T–. Die Farnkräuter der Erde : beschreibende Darstellung der geschlechter und wichtigeren Arten der Farnpflanzen mit besonderer Berücksichtigung der Exotischen . 34. T. coespi- tosum. Habitusbild, etwas vergT. Sorus, stark vergr. nach Hooker. Stengeln und kahnförmigen, dachziegeligen Blättchen an den Stengeln, Mimicry eines Mooses oder der Jungermannia sphagnoides. Rhizom kriechend, fadenförmig, dicht verwoben, Stengel sehr zahlreich aber einzeln, 3—4 cm lang, aufrecht, von der Basis an zweizeilig und dicht mit ovalen, stumpfen, ganzrandigen, sitzenden, concaven, sich berührenden, wagrecht abste
RM2ANEDMG–Organography of plants, especially of the archegoniatae and spermaphyta . guished. I. The Elaters act as Organs ofEjection.A. There are no Elaterophores.{a) Type of Jungermannia. The elatersare free ; they are not fastened to the wall of thesporogonium and have no definite arrangementinside the capsule. The capsule opens by fourvalves, and the moist mass of spores and elatersis thus exposed to drying. So soon as the wallof the capsule ruptures the ejection of the sporesbegins ; it lasts only a short time usually and isall over in a few minutes. The existence of thesporogonium finds in this its
RMH2X9E2–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros BHL229
RM2BDMK5F–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros
RM2AFW8KC–. The Intellectual observer. fruit. The capsule burst, to exhibit the proportions, the irmt-stalkspores gone. being long, and the perianth large in com-parison to the rest of the plant. Another species, fruiting both in winter and spring, rarelyfound among rocks, but loving humid places and flourishingupon decaying wood and at the foot of alders, is Jungermanniaheterophylla, or the various-leaved Jungermannia; it has abranched and creeping stem, with roundish ovate decurrentleaves, the apex generally obtusely emarginate or entire, rarelyacutely delved out, the stipules bi-quadrifid, here and t
RMH2X9E3–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros BHL229
RM2BDMK7R–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros
RMMAB2XG–. Dr. L. Rabenhorst's Kryptogamen-Flora von Deutschland, Oesterreich und der Schweiz . Fig. 278. Haplozia sphaerocarpa var. nana. a Perianth tragende Pflanze von der Seite gesehen, Verg. 20/^. b Perianth mit Hüllblättern von vorn, Verg. ^^j^. var. amplexicaulis (Dum.) Synonyme: Jungermannia amplexicaulis Dumortier, Syl). Jungerm. S. 5 (1831). Haplozia amplexicaulis Dumortier, Hep. Europ. S. 60 (1874). Solenostoma amplexicaule Stephani, Spec. hep. Bd. II S. 58 (1901). Jungermannia tersa Nees, Naturg. I. S. 329 (1833). Exsikkaten: Gottsche u. Rabenhorst, Hep. Europ. exs. 186! 307! 511! 532! Baue
RM2AWXB12–Text-book of botany, morphological and physiological . etative structure of which consists of a small slender filiform stem, bearingdistinctly differentiated leaves (Jungermannia, Radula, Mastigobryum. Frullania,Lophocolea, &c.). Between the thalloid and foliose forms of this family are somewhich present various stages of transition (as Fossombronia and Blasia). The Leaves of all Hepaticce are simple plates of cells, in which even themid-rib usual in the leaves of Mosses is always wanting. In most of the thalloid forms the growing apical region of each shoot(Fig. 211, s) lies in an anterior de
RMH2X9E5–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros BHL229
RM2BDMK7X–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros
RMMCTJKG–. Fig. ISO. A—D Bulgaria polymorpha (Oed.) Wettst. A Habitus des Pilzes zwischen Eichenborke, nat. Gr.; B Fruchtkörper im Längsschnitt (2/1); C Schlauch mit Paraphysen; D Conidientragender Mycelfaden (300/1). — E Sarcosoma javanicum Eehm, Schlauch mit Paraphysen (90/11. — F—J Paryphedria Ueimerlii Zuk. F Habitus des Pilzes auf Jungermannia quinquedentata, wenig vergr.; G Schnitt durch den Fruchtkörper (300/1), a Algenzellen, 6 B. der Jungermannia, m Mycel; H Schlauch mit Paraphysen (SOO/1); J Sporen (1000)1). {A Original; B nach Tulasne; C nach Keh m; D nach Brefeld; E nach Lindau; F—J nach Zu
RM2ANB0H8–Handbook of British Hepaticae : containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia and Anthoceros . Perigonialleaves smaller, closely imbricate in two rows.Primary shoots leafless, creeping, with rootlets.Leaves succubous, distichous, or subsecund, dorsalmargin decurrent, entire, ventral arcuate, entire, orcut. Amphigastria inconspicuous.—Carr. Br.Hep. 51. Plagicchila asplenioides, Vain., Dum. Stem ascending, branched ; vertical leavessubcurrent, rounded-ovate, convex, slightlyrecurved, dentate ; perichaetial leaves revolute 156 HANDBOOK OF BRITIS
RMH2X9DX–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros BHL229
RM2BDMK69–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros
RM2ANABEK–Handbook of British Hepaticae : containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia and Anthoceros . ent, bilobed,margin of the lobes elevated, slightly undulate,rounded, bright green, tawny when old, one-nerved,eporose, attached by fibrils along the nerve. Fruc-tification dioicous mostly, sometimes monoicous.Male receptacle plane above, granulate, circular,depressed in the centre, hemispherical beneath, HANDBOOK OF BRITISH HEPATIC7E. 275 hispid at the margin with short straight setae, en-closing numerous ovatecellules, pedunclescarcely as long as
RMH2X9DY–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros BHL229
RM2BDMJY4–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros (Page 40)
RM2ANB1H4–Handbook of British Hepaticae : containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia and Anthoceros . emarginatelybidentate, or tridentate, with themiddle tooth largest or multi-dentate (fig. 105). Stipules free,small, bifid, furnished with a smalltooth sometimes about the base ;fruit terminal, perianth prismatic,the angles without wings, mouthlaciniate, laciniae toothed, bractslarger, many toothed at the apex,sometimes with the dorsal margin serrate ; invo-lucral stipules ovate and bifid. Lophocolea heterophylla, Schr. Stem ascending, branched, lea
RMH2X9E0–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros BHL229
RM2BDMK72–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros (Page 251)
RM2AJ8R0M–The natural history of plants, their forms, growth, reproduction, and distribution; . 4 d 5 6 Fig. 140.—Liverworts with Cell-nets, Cell-plates and Cell-rows in various transitional forms. ^ Jungermannia pumila. « Jungermannia quinquedentata. « Polyotus magellanicus. * Ptilidium ciliare. * Trichocoleatomentella. « Jungermannia trichophylla. (All the figures magnified.) most cases so arranged that a stem represents the starting-point and support ofmany leaves and roots. In the simplest form the plant-body appears as embryoand as bud. The latter consists of a very short stem, beset with leaves
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RM2ANAJM4–Handbook of British Hepaticae : containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia and Anthoceros . wn.| Spores brown, granular. Perigonial J leaves terminal on more slenderstems, broadly ovate, with a hyalineragged margin. Antheridiaroundish, one or two together, onslender pedicels. Intermediate be-162. 163. tween G. concinnatum and G. crenu-latum. The leaves closely pressed together, so asnot to be easily detached, entirely, or almost,smooth at the edges, and with none of the cells pro-jecting beyond the others (fig. 163). Gymnomitrium crenula
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RM2ANAYFR–Handbook of British Hepaticae : containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia and Anthoceros . figure (fig. 121), always more orless embracing the stem with their base, and desti-tute of any appendages.—{Plate 4, fig. 60.) Dr. Carrington writes that : Hooker describesthis as not differing from A. crcnitlata except in size,but all the specimens I have examined are destituteof the conspicuous border cells, and the perianthis not compressed. Aplozia lanceolata, L., Dum. Stem creeping, simple, leaves accumbent,oblong-elliptic, rounded, entire; st
RMH2X9C1–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros (Page 279) BHL229
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RM2ANAHRG–Handbook of British Hepaticae : containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia and Anthoceros . 170. 171. and denuded so as to resemble a stipe. Midribcovered beneath with fibrous radicles. Perianthwidening at the mouth, broad in proportion to itslength, the sides ribbed or lamellate. Calyptraconcealed. Capsule round, olive brown, openingirregularly. Elaters bispiral (figs. 170, 171). HANDBOOK OF BRITISH HEPATIC/E. 249 Genus 36. PELLIA, Raddi. Involucre cup-shaped, mouth torn into teeth.Perianth none. Calyptra four-valved, valvesnaked, rounded
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RM2AN1J7Y–Introduction to structural and systematic botany, and vegetable physiology, : being a 5th and revedof the Botanical text-book, illustrated with over thirteen hundred woodcuts . er surface, with great tenacity, while by FIG. 1319. Steetzia Lyellii, with the young fructification still included in the tubular peri-anth. 1320. Dehiscent sporangium of a Jungermannia, on its fruit-stalk, with some of theleaves at its base, magnified enough to exhibit its cellular structure. 1321. Two elaters fromthe same (a, in an entire state ; b, with only the threads remaining), and some spores, highlymagnified.
RMH2X9DN–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros (Page 91) BHL229
RM2BDMK24–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros (Page 142)
RM2ANANDG–Handbook of British Hepaticae : containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia and Anthoceros . ur pale yel-lowish green. Perichrctial leaves large, with fouror five very unequal, incurved segments. Calyxoblong-ovate, greenish, diaphanous above and pli-cate, mouth somewhat contracted, and unequallytoothed. Capsule ovate, dark brown, four-valved.Elaters bispiral, attenuated in both directions.—{Plate 4, fig. 54.) Jungermannia ventricosa, Dicks. Stem ascending, rather branched; leavesaccumbent, subquadrate, obtusely emarginate,concave; perichaet
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RM2BDMK28–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros (Page 188)
RM2AFW8D9–. The Intellectual observer. ummer. We shall, therefore, pass on to tbenext group, those furnished with a nerve or costa, and whoseperianth is single. And here we have a slender, but veryabundant species—Jungermannia furcata, the forked Junger-mannia—which may be found on rocks, on heathy ground,about the roots of trees, or climbing their trunks, and some-times on low bushes. It has a linear frond, as will be seen bythe illustration, dichotomous, membranaceous, and costate, glabrous or smooth above,but beneath and on the mar-gin more or less hairy, of atender green hue, and thefronds so crowde
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RM2BDMJYT–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros (Page 48)
RM2AX1W6F–The elements of botany for beginners and for schools . ndeed, Thallopliytes are so multifarious, sonumerous in kinds, so protean in their stages and transformations, so re-condite in their fructification, and many so microscopic in size, either of Fig. 542. Fructification of a Jungermannia, magnified; its cellular spore-stalk,surrounded at base by some of the leaves, at summit the 4-valved spore-case open-ing, discharging spores and elaters. 543. Two elaters and some spores from thesame, highly magnified. FiQ. 544. One of the frondose Liverworts, Steetzia, otherwise like a Junger-mannia; the s
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RM2BDMK3R–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros (Page 165)
RM2AJCRFP–Elementary botany . Fig. 272.Antheridium of a foliose liverwort (jungermannia).. Fig. 271.Foliose liverwort, male plant showing anthe-ridia in axils of the leaves (a jungermannia). Fig. 273.F«liose liverwort, female plant withrhizoids. quadrants, the wall forming four valves, which spread apart fromthe unequal drying of the cells, so that the spores are set free, asshown in fig. 276. Some of the cells inside of the capsule de-velop elaters here also as well as spores. These are illustratedin fig. 278. 500. In this plant we see that the sporophyte remains attached FOLIOSE LIVERWORTS. 239 to the
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RM2BDMK3T–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros (Page 141)
RM2ANBD5T–Handbook of British Hepaticae : containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia and Anthoceros . 42. Old walls, rocks, and trunks. (Fr. March, April.) Grows in considerable patches. Stems 1 to 2or 3 inches long, flexuose, often pinnate, withstraggling branches,which are againshortly branched.Leaves closely im-bricate in two rows,so as to concealthe upper part of the stem(fig. 42), unequally two-lobed, the upper lobe thelargest, alternate, ovate, ap-proaching round, slightlyconcave, margins incurved,entire, or here and there 44 4^ slightly tooth
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RM2BDMK2C–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros (Page 205)
RM2ANBB7H–Handbook of British Hepaticae : containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia and Anthoceros . 50.flexuose cilia (fig. 50), rarely forked, and jointedthroughout; brownish-green or purplish-brown. Stipules quad-rate, broader thanthe stem, adpressed,unequally lobed at theend, along the wholemargin fringed withlong cilia, which arenarrower than on theleaves(fig. 51). Perichae- i,d tial leaves, two or three mac at the base of eachcalyx, closely adpressed,widely ovate, cut into two or three unequal seg-ments, and ciliate along the margin. Calyx th
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RM2ANB8N2–Handbook of British Hepaticae : containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia and Anthoceros . SH HEPATIC/F.. Common in moist woods, heaths, and moors. Summer. Growing in dense or scattered patches. Stemsi to 2 inches long, slender, procumbent, simple or innovant, pale green.Leaves rather close and im-bricate, so as to conceal thestem, small at the base andextremity, largest in themiddle, horizontal, widelyovate, convex above, manyentire, others cleft with awide obtuse notch at theapex, without serratures, paleglaucous green (fig. 62).Stipule
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RM2AJCR3F–Elementary botany . Fig. 274- Fruiting plant of a foliose liver- ¥is. 277. Fig. 278.wort (jungermannia). Leafy part is the gametophyte ; stalk and cap- Four spores from Elaters, at left showing the two sule is the sporophyte (sporogonium mother cell held in spiral marks, at right a branched in the bryophytes). a group. elater. Figs. 275-278.—Sporogonium of liverwort (jungermannia) opening by splitting into fourparts, showing details of elaters and spores. 240 MORPHOLOGY. The Horned Liverworts.* 501. The horned liverworts take their name from the shape of the spo-rogonium. This is long, slender
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RM2BDMK1T–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros (Page 231)
RM2AFMAMB–. The structure and development of mosses and ferns (Archegoniatae). f the embryo. A-D, in longitudinal sec-tion; E-G, transverse sections. B and C are sections of the same embryo, andE, F, G are successive sections of a single embryo, X525. The Sporophyte The early divisions in the embryo of Porella are less regu-lar than those in some others of the foliose Liverworts. Theembryo at first is composed of a row of cells, of which thelowest, cut off by the first transverse wall, undergoes here nofurther development. In Jungermannia bicuspidafa (Hof-meister, Kienitz-Gerloff, Leitgeb) this lower ce
RMH2X98H–Handbook of British Hepatic containing descriptions and figures of the indigenous species of Marchantia, Jungermannia, Riccia, and Anthoceros (Page 11) BHL229
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