Elements of Applied Microscopy. a Text-Book for Beginners

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At the ends of the cell the cross-hatched transverse walls are sometimes seen. In poplar the cells of this type are MICROSCOPY OF PAPER. 103 less numerous and show larger pores more closely packed.
At the ends of the cells is often a long, tail-like point, and the grating seen in the case of birch is absent.
8. The Fibres of Straw and Esparto. — Paper made from the stems of the grasses and grains is largely made up of long slender bast-fibres knotted or thickened at regular intervals (Fig. 41,
...a). The central canal is con- stricted at these points and fine pores are present, passing through the wall. The characteristic structures of such tissues are, however, the cells from the epidermis, flat and of somewhat variable length, with thick walls and serrated edges (Fig. 41, c).
In straw pulp a third type of cell is present, derived from the internal pith layer. These are large, oval, thin- walled cells with rounded ends (Fig. 41, J). Esparto or alfalfa grass (Stipa tenacissima) may be distinguished from straw by the absence of these pith cells, and by the smaller size of the bast and epidermal elements.


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