that creep through the earth seeking food for the tree. Some, as in the spruce or hemlock, do not go very deep but spread great distances through the soil in search of food, others, like the hickory, go nearly straight down. The interesting feature of these tree roots is that the part nearest the trunk is all but dead, and acts mostly as an anchor, while the fibrous rootlets or even finer subdivisions known as root hairs at the extremities are the food gatherers. At the very end of all rootlets and of roots is a rootcap ([Figure 3]), harder than the rest of the threadlike rootlet. This rootcap is, if not quite dead, at least useless as a food gatherer, but serves as a tiny pioneer wedge which forces its way among stones or other obstructions, so allowing the living root hairs just behind to gather the food to which it leads the way. In certain of the rocky islands of the Bahamas wild fig trees may be seen, growing on the bare rocks, their roots sprawling in every direction in search of a crevice through which the rootcap can force its way. Such roots may extend thirty or forty feet from the trunk of the tree over the bare rock in search of a favorable crack where they plunge to the cool depths and secure the food and water necessary for life.



Roots are not always of this common type. Sometimes, particularly in certain biennials, they are swelled to form great thickened portions, often weighing many pounds. The sweet potato is a familiar example, and a related plant, one of our morning-glories, has an enormous perennial root, known to weigh as much as fifty pounds. This swelling of the roots of plants is a quite common characteristic of certain kinds and has great commercial significance. Carrots, turnips, rutabagas, beets, and parsnips are familiar examples. The purpose of such roots is to store food for the plant, and this thrifty habit of some roots has been turned by the gardeners to our advantage.