English:
Title: Applied and economic botany, especially adapted for the use of students in technical schools, agricultural, pharmaceutical and medical colleges, and also as a book of reference for chemists, food analysts and students engaged in the morphological and physiological study of plants
Identifier: appliedeconomicb00krae (find matches)
Year: (c1914) ((c10s)
Authors: Kraemer, Henry, 1868-1924
Subjects: Botany; Botany, Economic; Botany, Medical
Publisher: Philadelphia, The author
Contributing Library: MBLWHOI Library
Digitizing Sponsor: MBLWHOI Library
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Text Appearing Before Image:
CLASSIFICATION OF ANGIOSPERMS. 617 partly epiphytic, and have dimorphic leaves, the smaller ones being pitcher-like. The plant which is cultivated in greenhouses, Marc- gravia umbcllata, is used in the Antilles in medicine. c. THEACE^: OR TEA FAMILY.—The plants are shrubs or trees with alternate, evergreen leaves, and perfect, regular
Text Appearing After Image:
FIG. 339- Picking tea on a plantation in Japan, the wall at the left probably being the ruins of an ancient temple. While the plant ordinarily is a shrub, it is kept trimmed and is a bush from 2 to 5 feet high. The plants begin to bear in the third year, and continue to yield a commercial article from 3 to 7 years thereafter. The number of crops per year is determined by the geographical location. In the tropical fields of Ceylon, India, and Japan leaves are picked frequently, while in northern Japan they secure only one crop a year.—Reproduced by permission of The Philadelphia Commercial Museum. flowers with numerous stamens, occurring one or more in the axils of the leaves. The fruit is a 3- to 5-locular, dehiscent capsule. The most important member of this family is Thca sinensis, the two varieties viridis and Bohca furnishing the leaves known as TEA. The Tea tree is indigenous to Eastern Asia, and is now extensively cultivated in China, Japan, India, Java, Brazil, Sicily, Portugal and France, and to some extent in the Southern LTnited States (Figs. 338, 339).
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