Origin of "caluescent" anf "acaulescent" terms
In message . com,
Hosley writes
On Jul 23, 4:51 pm, Stewart Robert Hinsley
wrote:
In message . com,
Hosley writesDoes anyone know how long the terms
"caulescent" and "acaulescent"
have been in use, and if their is a reference I can point to where
they were first used? They refer to whether or not a plant has a
visible stem. For example, trees are considered caulescent because of
their prominent trunks, whereas some (but not all ) shrubs are
acaulescent, with their stems being underground.
Thanks,
Hos
The earliest example I found was (for caulescent) in Martyn's "The
Language of Botany", published in 1796. Given the context one presumes
that the term has a longer pedigree.
BTW, the terms apply to herbaceous plants as well as to woody plants.
--
Stewart Robert Hinsley
Thanks for finding this source, which I'm currently trying to find. I
suppose I can just cite botany papers that use the term, which should
be easy to find.
It's in Google Books
--
Stewart Robert Hinsley
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