IV. 



THE ANTIIOCEROTES 



149 



(2) has also studied this species, and his results agree entirely 

 with those of the writer. 



The thallus much resembles a small Antlioccros, and sec- 

 tions through it show that in its growth and the development 

 and structure of the sexual organs there is close correspondence. 

 The thallus contains very large lacunae, which are formed in 

 pretty regular acropetal order, and vertical sections show these 

 large cavities increasing regularly in size as they recede from 

 the apex. Similar but less regular lacunce occur in A. fiisifor- 

 mis. The antheridia arise as in AntJwceros, endogenously. 

 The youngest stage found is shown in Fig. 80, A. Here evi- 



F\G. 80. — Notothylas orbicularis. Development of the antheridium. D, cross-section, 

 the others longitudinal sections; E, nearly ripe antheridium, X300, the other fig- 

 ures X600; (^, A, the primary antheridial cells. 



:%'>mrto\'fv''i* ? . jr'vA -f ' -■5.t'jt 



;/^.t5l rj;t 



dently the young antheridia (c?) have been formed by the longi- 

 tudinal division of a single hypodermal cell, whose sister epider- 

 mal cell has divided again by a transverse wall to form the outer 

 wall of the antheridiaT cavity (Figs. A, B). The commonest' 

 number of antheridia formed is four.''' "~ r:^':.'^n "■^'^ i 



Less regularity is found in the next divisions than in AnfJio- 

 ceros, although in the main they are the same. This is observ- 

 able both in longitudinal and cross-sections (see Fig. 80, D). 



