304 DIVISION II. — COURSE OF DEVELOPMENT OF FUNGI. 



Their shape and size vary in the different species; they arc usually constant and 

 characteristic in each species, less so in genera and subgenera. The large, ellipsoid 

 or elongated, obtuse vesicles of the Coprini, which strike the naked eye, are remarkable 

 forms which require to be especially mentioned (Fig. 139). In a number of other 

 species they are cylindrical, club-shaped or flask-shaped, blunt at the extremities in 

 Polyporus umbellatus according to Corda, and in Agaricus viscidus, L. according to 

 Phoebus, or pointed, or with a knob in Lactarius, Russula, and Boletus according to 

 Corda; Agaricus fumosus, P. and A. laccatus, Scop. &c. have simple or branched 

 cvlindrically hair-shaped cystidia according to Hoffmann ; in A. Pluteus, P. they are 

 flask-shaped and furnished at the upper extremity with several short sharp projections 

 which are bent a little backwards into the shape of a hook 1 . In most of the 

 leathery or woody species in which they occur they are narrowly conical in form with 

 sharply pointed extremities which stand out prominently ' like lance-points ' from 

 the hymenium, as in Stereum, species of Corticium, Trametes Pini, Polyporus 

 igniarius, &c. 



The structure of the cystidia is as follows. In the species with a juicy flesh 

 a thin and usually colourless membrane encloses the colourless cell-contents which 

 are either protoplasm with vacuoles or quite transparent. I found in cystidia from 

 half-matured hymenia of Coprinus micaceus (Fig. 139 p) a central irregularly elongate 

 protoplasmic body, from which numerous branched anastomosing threads with active 

 amoeboid movement radiated to the wall ; older cystidia in the Coprini are almost 

 perfectly transparent. In Lactarius deliciosus and allied species the cystidia are filled 

 with densely granular opaque contents. In this respect they resemble the laticiferous 

 tubes, and in thick sections it often looks as though they were branches of these 

 tubes, especially as they extend in this species far below the subhymenial tissue into 

 the interior of the trama. But I always observed that they sprang as branches from 

 non-laticiferous hyphae of the trama. The cystidia are of a deep purple-red colour in 

 Agaricus balaninus, Berk. 2 In the conical cystidia of the non-fleshy species the 

 membrane, especially in the projecting extremities, is strongly thickened and coloured 

 to correspond with the rest of the tissues. 



Further details will be found in special works on the Hymenomycetes, especially 

 those of Corda, and in a separate work on the cystidia by H. Hoffmann, and in R. 

 Hartig's writings. 



According to Corda and the doubtful statements of earlier observers, the cystidia of 

 the fleshy Fungi discharge their contents in the form of drops through the apex which 

 is open in the figure. Neither I nor Hoffmann nor Brcfeld were able to satisfy 

 ourselves that this was done spontaneously ; it was but rarely that I saw the cystidia 

 burst when placed in water, and according to Hoffmann this takes place quite 

 irregularly. The moist surface, which often bears small drops of liquid, is a phe- 

 nomenon which it has in common with all free Fungus-cells that are rich in cell-sap. 



It is plain that the formations above described in the non-fleshy forms belong to the 

 same category as those in the fleshy ones, for there is no other more general difference 

 between them than that between fleshy and non-fleshy species. It is as little to be 

 disputed that the cystidia belong morphologically to the category of hair-formations, 

 one may say indeed that they arc prominent hymenial hairs. 



1 Ditmar, in Sturm D. fl. Ill, i, t. 28. 



' Montague, Esqtrisse org. et phys. de la classe des Champignons. 



