Haeckel had an intense admiration for Goethe's morphological work.
The bion is the physiological, as the morphon is the morphological, individual.
"morphological" seems quite just, but I do not see how I can avoid using it.
The morphological significance of the paraphysis is uncertain.
So far we have only learned what is not to be regarded as morphological adaptation.
In P. Wilsoni we have a wonderful example of morphological emphasis.
In their morphological characters they gradually approach the pelagic forms upwards and the abyssal downwards.
Probably all Cyclodiscaria can be derived from Archidiscus, from a morphological as well as a phylogenetic point of view.
The morphological value of such beings is the same as that of the egg of any animal.
Systemy not only the expression of morphological relationship, 455.
morphology mor·phol·o·gy (môr-fŏl'ə-jē)
n.
The branch of biology that deals with the form and structure of organisms without consideration of function.
The form and structure of an organism or one of its parts.
The study of the structure of living things. (Compare anatomy and physiology.)