has come to be used for the flower-cluster itself in works on descriptive botany. Thus a cyme or a panicle may be called an inflorescence. It will be seen that even solitary flowers follow either indeterminate or determinate methods of branching.
The flower-stem.—The stem of a solitary flower is known as a peduncle; also the general stem of a flower-cluster. The stem of the individual flower in a cluster is a pedicel. In the so-called stemless plants the peduncle may arise directly from the ground, or crown of the plant, as in dandelion, hyacinth, garden daisy; this kind of peduncle is called a scape. A scape may bear one or many flowers. It has no foliage leaves, but it may have bracts.
Suggestions.—166. Name six columns in your notebook as
follows: spike, raceme, corymb, umbel, cyme, solitary. Write
each of the following in its appropriate column: larkspur, grape,
rose, wistaria, onion, bridal wreath, banana, hydrangea, phlox,
China berry, lily-of-the-valley, Spanish dagger (or yucca), sorghum,
tuberose, hyacinth, mustard, goldenrod, peach, hollyhock, mullein,
crêpe myrtle, locust, narcissus, snapdragon, peppergrass,
shepherd's purse, coxcomb, wheat, hawthorn, geranium, carrot,
elder, millet, dogwood, castor bean; substitute others for plants
that do not grow in your region. 167. In the study of flower-clusters,
it is well to choose first those that are fairly typical of the
various classes discussed in the preceding paragraphs. As soon
as the main types are well fixed in the mind, random clusters
should be examined, for the pupil must never receive the impression
that all flower-clusters follow the definitions in books. Clusters
of some of the commonest plants are very puzzling, but the
pupil should at least be able to discover whether the inflorescence
is determinate or indeterminate. Figures 221 to 223 (from the
German) illustrate the theoretical modes of inflorescence. The
numerals indicate the order of opening.