|
Definition of Lycopodineae
1. Noun. Alternative designation for the class Lycopsida.
Generic synonyms: Class
Group relationships: Class Lycopodiate, Class Lycopsida, Lycopodiate, Lycopsida
Lexicographical Neighbors of Lycopodineae
Literary usage of Lycopodineae
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Organography of Plants, Especially of the Archegoniata and Spermaphyta by Karl Goebel, Isaac Bayley Balfour (1905)
"II THE MATURE SPORANGIUM OF THE PTERIDOPHYTA A. lycopodineae\ We have in this
group two kinds of sporangia to consider. 1. ..."
2. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1884)
"... and lycopodineae, commenced in the lower Silurian, and had their maximum in
the carboniferous. Cycadaceae have their origin in the Devonian, ..."
3. The Structure and Development of Mosses and Ferns (Archegoniatae). by Douglas Houghton Campbell (1905)
"... are more like those of the Ferns, and make it extremely improbable' that the
strobilus is homologous with that of the lycopodineae. ..."
4. Journal of the Royal Microscopical Society by Royal Microscopical Society, London (1882)
"... (the formation of the sporangia re(2) Equisetaceae. sembles that of the
heterosporous lycopodineae, that of the leaves corresponds to Equisetum). ..."
5. Glimpses of the Cosmos by Lester Frank Ward (1913)
"... lycopodineae in the Carboniferous, the Cycadaceae in the Lias or Oolite, the
Coniferas in the Wealden or Neocomian, the Monocotyledons in the Eocene, ..."
6. Practical Botany by Joseph Young Bergen, Otis William Caldwell (1911)
"In one genus (Selaginella) of the class lycopodineae two kinds of asexual spores
are borne, — one which, upon germination, produces the male gametophyte, ..."