Online Encyclopedia

GERANIACEAE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 763 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GERANIACEAE  , in

botany, a small but very widely distributed natural order of
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Dicotyledons belonging to the subclass Polypetalae, containing about 36o
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species in 11 genera . It is re-presented in Britain by two genera,
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Geranium (crane's-
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bill) and Erodium (stork's-bill), to which belong nearly two-thirds of the
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total number of species . The
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plants are mostly herbs, rarely becoming shrubby, with generally
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simple glandular hairs on the stem and leaves . The opposite or alternate leaves have a pair of small stipules at the
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base of the stalk and a palminerved blade . The flowers, which are generally arranged in a cymose inflorescence, are hermaphrodite, hypogynous, and, except in Pelargonium,
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regular . The parts are arranged in
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fives . There are five
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free sepals, overlapping in the bud, and, alternating with these, five free petals . In Pelargonium the flower is zygomorphic , with a spurred posterior sepal and the petals differing in
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size or shape . In Geranium the stamens are obdiplostemonous, i.e. an
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outer whorl of five opposite the petals alternates with an inner whorl of five opposite the sepals; at the base of each of the antisepalous stamens is a honey-gland . In Erodium the members of the outer whorl are reduced to scale-like structures (staminodes), and in Pelargonium from two to seven only are fertile . There is no satisfactory explanation of this break inthe regular alternation of successive whorls; the outer whorl of stamens arises in course of development before the inner, so that there is no question of subsequent displacement . There are five, or sometimes fewer, carpels, which unite to form an ovary with as many chambers, in each of which are one or two, rarely more, pendulous anatropous ovules, attached to the central column in such a way that the micropyle points outwards and the raphe is turned towards the placenta .

The

long beak-like style divides at the top into a corresponding number of slender stigmas . The larger-flowered species of Geranium are markedly protandrous, the outer stamens, inner stamens and stigmas becoming functional in succession . For instance, in meadow crane's-bill G. pratense, each whorl of stamens ripens in turn, becoming erect and shedding their pollen; as the anthers wither the filaments
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bend outwards, and when all the anthers have diverged the stigmas become mature and ready for
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pollination . By this Meadow Crane's-bill, Geranium pratense .
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Flora Londinensis.) 1, Flower after removal of petals . 3, Floral
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diagram, the dots 2, Fruit after splitting . 1 and 2 opposite the inner stamens about natural size. represent honey-glands. arrangement self-pollination is prevented and
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cross-pollination ensured by the visits of bees which come for the honey secreted by the glands at the base of the inner stamens . In species with smaller and less conspicuous flowers, such as G. molle, the flowers of which are only a to % in. in diameter, self-pollination is rendered possible, since the divisions of the stigma begin to
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separate before the outer stamens have
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shed all their pollen; the nearness of the stigmas to the dehiscing anthers favours self-pollination . In the ripe• fruit ,the carpels separate into five one-seeded portions (cocci), which break away from the central column, either
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rolling elastically outwards and upwards or becoming spirally
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twisted . In most species of Geranium the cocci split open on the inside and the seeds are shot out by the elastic uptwisting (fig . 1); in Erodium and Pelargonium each coccus remains closed, and the long twisted upper portion separates from the central column, forming an awn, the distribution of which is favoured by the presence of bristles or hairs . The embryo generally fills the seed, and the cotyledons are rolled or folded on each other .

(After

Curtis, Geranium is the most widely distributed genus; it has 16o species and is spread over all temperate regions with a few species in the tropics . Three
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British species—G. sylvaticum, G. pratense and G . Robertianum (herb-Robert)—reach the arctic zone, while G. patagonicum and G. magellanicum are found in the antarctic . Erodium contains 50 species (three are British), most of which are confined to the Mediterranean region and west
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Asia, though others occur in
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America, in South Africa and West
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Australia . Pelargonium, with 195 species, has its centre in South Africa; the well-known garden and green-house " geraniums " are species of Pelargonium (see GERANIUM) .

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