Showing posts with label Plant anatomy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Plant anatomy. Show all posts

Friday, February 19, 2016

Professor Small's Book of Tiny Wonders


When I went to university to read for a degree in botany, almost 46 years ago, there were only three pieces of equipment that I had to take with me:


  • A white lab coat (bequeathed from my grandfather who was a dairyman and wore one for his daily work)
  • A dissecting kit with a cut-throat razor for cutting sections of plants
  • A hand lens, because a botany degree in those days involved a lot of field work


What reminded me of all this was this little book - Pocket-Lens Plant Lore by James Small, published in 1931, that I bought a few years ago for 50p. in a second-hand book shop. 

The author, appropriately named for someone who was writing about tiny objects, was Professor of Botany at Queen's University Belfast and seems to have written the book for his children, because the dedication reads:

To Sheila and Donn,
two small children who wanted to 
SEE THE INSIDES OF THINGS



































It's a charming little book that, month-by-month, uses a hand lens to explore the features of 192 different plant species, including their buds, leaves, flowers and seeds.



































There are pages of small illustrations for plants that are in season, showing details of their external features and internal structure that's visible in sections of stems.























This is a page for February, showing groundsel, white willow, oak, privet, elm, birch and laurel. For every species there is a page of description for the features you can expect to see with a hand lens.

















Methods were simple, needing just a hand lens, a pair of self-closing forceps and a razor blade ....


... all of which I had lying around, so I took the book for a test-drive using lungwort Pulmonaria officinalis, which was flowering in the garden today.



Here's Small's drawing of the features to look out for and....























... here is the accompanying page of description



































Sure enough, the two kinds of hairs on the flower stalk that he mentioned were there: stiff pointed ones on a pediment, that make the plant feel bristly, and shorter ones tipped with a gland that produces a slightly sticky secretion.





















And here are the hairs in the corolla tube that he talks about. It may be that they help to deter small nectar thieves like ants, because ....























... here is the flower with the corolla removed, as he advises. That square of yellowish tissue is made up of the nectaries. 

Inside, at the base of the stigma and style, the four 'eggs' are the ovaries containing the ovules that will eventually become four black seeds, in an arrangement that is typical of the Boraginaceae, the family to which lungwort belongs.

What I really like about this book is that it's aimed at satisfying the natural curiosity that all children are born with.

I'm planning to produce an updated photographic version for my own grandchildren. 

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Skeletons.....





I threw these old seed heads of henbane Hyoscyamus niger on the compost heap back in the autumn and since then winter weather and fungal decay have done their work, reducing them to skeletons and revealing their complex network of veins.








More skeletonised plants here

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Skeleton leaf




































I found this almost intact skeleton leaf when it was raking up the leaves from under the hedge. The network of smaller and smaller veins is the plant's amazing distribution and collection system for the living cells in the leaf - water carried outwards via the xylem to the outer reaches of the leaf then sugars, made by photosynthesis in the leaf cell chloroplasts, carried back into the plant. A wondwerful example of the beauty of the functional in nature...

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Ghosts of 2009..

Down amongst the dead leaves left over from last autumn lie the skeletal remains of last summer's wild flowers. We found this partially decayed seed head of giant bellflower Campanula latifolia in the woodland beside the old railway line that leads to the Nine Arches viaduct in the Derwentside Country Park , where the green shoots of this year's plants are already beginning to sprout.

All the softer tissues in the seed capsules have rotted away, leaving the network of tough-walled xylem vessels - the internal plumbing system that that supplied the developing seeds with water. Double-click for larger, clearer images.