2 MOSSES AND FERNS chap. 



chlorophyll, and these enclose a mass of small colourless cells, 

 the sperm cells, each of which gives rise to a single ciliated 

 spermatozoid. The development of the latter is very uniform 

 throughout the Archegoniatae, and differs mainly from the 

 same process in the higher green Alg?e, especially the Characese, 

 in the larger amount of nuclear substance in the spermatozoids 

 of the former. 



Fertilisation is only effected when the plants with ripe 

 sexual organs are covered with water. The absorption of 

 water bv the mature sexual organs causes them to open, and 

 then, as the spermatozoids are set free, they make their way 

 through the water by means of their cilia and enter the open 

 archegonium. into which they penetrate to the &gg. The 

 sexual cells do not differ essentially from those of the higher 

 AlgcT, and point unmistakably to the origin of the Arche- 

 goniatcT from similar aquatic forms. Indeed all of the 

 Archegoniat?e must still be considered amphibious, inasmuch 

 as the gametophyte or sexual plant is only functional when 

 partially or completely submerged. 



Non-sexual gonidia are known certainly only in Ancnra, 

 one of the lower Liverworts, but special reproductive buds or 

 gemmae, both unicellular and multicellular, are common in 

 many forms. 



A very marked characteristic of the whole group is the 

 sharply-marked alternation of sexual and non-sexual stages. 

 The sexual plant or gametophyte varies much in size and 

 complexity. It may be a simple flat thallus comparable in 

 structure to some Alg?e, and not superior to these in com- 

 plexity so far as the vegetative parts are concerned. In others 

 it becomes larger and shows a high degree of differentiation. 

 Thus among the Liverworts the Marchantiacere, w'hile the 

 gametophyte still retains a distinctly thalloid form, still show 

 a good deal of variety in the tissues of which the thallus is 

 composed. In others, e.g., the true Mosses, the gametophyte 

 has a distinct axis and leaves, and in the higher ones the tissues 

 are well differentiated for special functions. The gametophyte 

 itself may show two well-marked phases, the protonema and 

 the gametophore. The former is usually filamentous, and 

 arises directly from the germinating spore; and upon the 

 protonema, as a special branch or bud, the much more complex 

 gametophore is borne. Often, however, as in many thallose 



