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NECTARINE

Volume 14 · 819 words · 1815 Edition

fruit differing in nothing from the common peach, of which it is a species, but in having a smoother rind and a firmer pulp. See Persica.

Nectarium, from nectar, the fabled "drink of the gods;" defined by Linnaeus to be a part of the corolla, or appendage to the petals, appropriated for containing the honey, a species of vegetable salt under a fluid form, that oozes from the plant, and is the principal food of bees and other insects.

Notwithstanding this definition, which seems to consider the nectarium as necessary a part of the corolla as the petals, it is certain that all flowers are not provided with this appendage, neither indeed is it essential to fructification.

There is, besides, a manifest impropriety in terming the nectarium a part of the corolla. Linnaeus might, Milne, with equal propriety, have termed it a part or appendage of the stamens, calyx, or pointal, as the appearance in question is confined to no particular part of the flower, but is as various in point of situation as of form. The truth is, the term nectarium is exceedingly vague; and, if any determinate meaning can be affixed to it, is expressive of all the singularities which are observed in the different parts of flowers.

The tube, or lower part of flowers with one petal, Linnaeus considers as a true nectarium, because it is generally found to contain the sweet liquor formerly mentioned. This liquor Pontedera compares to that called amnios in pregnant animals, which enters the fertile or impregnated seeds; but that this is not at least Nectarium, least its sole use, is evident from this circumstance, that the honey or liquor in question is to be found in flowers where there are either no seeds, or those which, from the want of male organs, cannot be impregnated. Thus the male flowers of nettle and willow, the female flowers of sea-side laurel and black bryony, the male and female flowers of clutia, kiggelaria, and butcher's broom, all abound with the honey or nectar alluded to.

Vaillant was of opinion, that the nectarium was an essential part of the corolla; for which reason he distinguished the singular appearances in fennel flower and columbine by the name of petals: the coloured leaves which are now termed the petals he designates the flower cup.

That the nectarium, however, is frequently distinct from the petals, is evident both from the well known examples just mentioned, as likewise from the flowers of monkshood, hellebore, hyopyrum, fennel flower of Crete, barrenwort, gras of Parnassus, chocolate nut, cherleria, and sauvagesia.

These general observations being premised, we proceed to take a nearer and more particular view of the principal diversities, both in form and situation, of this striking appendage to the flower. 1. In many flowers the nectarium is shaped like a spur or horn; and that either in flowers of one petal, as valerian, water milfoil (utricularia), butterwort, and calvesfoot; or in such as have more than one, as larkspur, violet, fumitory, balsam, and orchis. 2. In the following plants, the nectarium is properly a part of the corolla, as lying within the substance of the petals: ranunculus, lily, iris, crown imperial, water leaf, mouse tail, ananas or pine apple, dog's-tooth violet, piperidge bush, vallifloria, hermannia, uvularia, and swertia. 3. The nectarium is frequently placed in a series or row within the petals, though entirely unconnected with their substance. In this situation it often resembles a cup, as in narcissus. A nectarium of this kind is said by Linnaeus to crown the corolla. The following are examples: daffodil, sea daffodil, campion, vicious campion, swallow-wort, stapelia, cynanchum, nepenthes, cherleria, balsam-tree, African spirea, witch-hazel, olax, and passion-flower. 4. In Indian-cress, buckler, mustard, Barbadoes cherry, and monotropa, the nectarium is situated upon or makes part of the calyx. 5. The nectarium in bastard flower-fence is seated upon the antherae or tops of the stamens; whence the name edenanthera, or glandular anthera, which has been given to this genus of plants. In the following list it is placed upon the filaments; bean-caper, bay, fraxinella, marvel of Peru, bell-flower, lead-wort, roella, and commelina. 6. In hyacinth, flowering-ruth, stock July flower, and rocket, the nectarium is placed upon the seed-bud. 7. In honey-flower, orpine, buckwheat, collinsonia, latrea, navelwort, mercury, clutia, kiggelaria, sea-side laurel, and African spirea, it is attached to the common receptacle. Lastly, in ginger, nettle, dyer's weed, heart-feed, coffea, turmeric, grewia, bastard-orpine, vanellae, threew-tree, and willow, the nectarium is of a very singular construction, and cannot properly fall under any of the foregoing heads.

In discriminating the genera, the nectarium often furnishes an essential character.

Plants which have the nectarium distinct from the petals, that is, not lodged within their substance, are Nectarium affirmed by Linnaeus to be generally poisonous. The following are adduced as examples: monkshood, heliophore, columbine, fennel-flower, gras of Parnassus, barren-wort, oleander, marvel of Peru, bean-caper, succulent swallow-wort, fraxinella, and honey-flower.